Herpestidae
Author
Don E. Wilson
Author
Russell A. Mittermeier
text
2009
2009-01-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 1 Carnivores
262
328
book chapter
3637
10.5281/zenodo.5676639
23dac009-8dc4-4021-a812-5f9db538c89c
978-84-96553-49-1
5676639
25.
Alexander’s
Cusimanse
Crossarchus alexandri
French:
Mangouste d'Alexander
/
German:
Kongo-Kusimanse
/
Spanish:
Cusimansé del
Congo
Taxonomy.
Crossarchus alexandri
Thomas & Wroughton, 1907
,
Ubangi,
Democratic Republic of the Congo
(formerly
Zaire
).
Two subspecies were recognized by Goldman in 1984, who proposed
minor
as restricted to eastern
DR Congo
and
Uganda
. However, subsequent research has discounted the subspecies status of this population and returned this species to monotypic status.
Distribution.
DR Congo
and
Uganda
.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 35-44 cm, tail 22.5-31.
7 cm
, hindfoot 7.5-9.
1 cm
, ear 1.9-2.
8 cm
; weight 1-2 kg. Largest member of the genus
Crossarchus
. Dark thick shaggy fur. Crest from head to tail (6-8 cm long between neck whorls). Conspicuous whorls of hair present on neck. Dorsal guard hairs 40-50 mm, gradually lengthening from nape to rump. Crest and whorl hair length similar to surrounding guard hairs. Snout-like nose is longest of the cusimanses (rostrum 34-36% of condylobasal length). Face has short fur. Five digits on foreand hindfeet. Well-developed claws on forefeet. Ectotympanic bullae inflated less than entotympanic bullae. Alexander's Cusimanse is sympatric with the subspecies
nigricolor
of the Angolan Cusimanse in the
DR Congo
, but is larger (head-body more than 36-4 cm, condylobasal more than
74 mm
, post-dental palate length subequal to width). Condylobasal 74-81-1 mm. Rostrum 25-7-31-9 mm. Zygomatic breadth 35-4-43-4 mm. Dental formula: 13/3, C 1/1, P3/3,M2/2=236.
Habitat.
Lowland and montane rainforest, damp valley bottoms, and seasonally flooded swamp forest. Said to utilize cultivated and inhabited land (in contrast to Angolan Cusimanse). Relict population believed to live on Mount Elgon (1500-2900 m).
Food and Feeding.
Believed to feed on invertebrates and vertebrates of the forest floor and in rotting logs, feeding mainly on earthworms, slugs, snails, and beetles, with some fruit.
Activity patterns.
Believed to be diurnal, although reports of at least some nocturnal activity at
Kivu
(
DR Congo
).
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
Social. Up to 20 animals in a group. Groups believed to rove, with no fixed dens. Contact calls with grunts and twitters whilst foraging. Will climb trees.
Breeding.
Nothing known.
Status and Conservation.
Not CITES listed. Classified as Least Concern in
The IUCN Red List
. Not endangered, with the exception of a relict population on Mount Elgon (possibly threatened by hunting). Heavily hunted for bushmeat in the
DR Congo
. Very little is known about this species and scientific studies, particularly on ecology and behavior, are needed.
Bibliography.
Coetzee (1977), Colyn &
Van
Rompaey (1990, 1994a), Colyn
et
al. (1987), Ewer (1973), Goldman (1984, 1987), Kingdon (1997),
Van
Rompaey & Colyn (1992, In press b), Wozencraft (2005).