Order Rodentia - Family Muridae
Author
Wilson, Don E.
Author
Reeder, DeeAnn
text
2005
The Johns Hopkins University Press
Baltimore
Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3 rd Edition), Volume 2
1189
1531
book chapter
0-8018-8221-4
10.5281/zenodo.7316535
Mus (Nannomys) musculoides
Temminck 1853
Mus (Nannomys) musculoides
Temminck 1853
,
Esquisses Zool. sur la Cote de
Guine
: 161
.
Type Locality:
West Africa, "Côte de
Guine
."
.
Vernacular Names:
Subsaharan Pygmy Mouse
.
Synonyms:
Mus (Nannomys) bella
(Thomas 1910)
;
Mus (Nannomys) enclavae
Heller 1911
;
Mus (Nannomys) gallarum
(Thomas 1910)
;
Mus (Nannomys) gondokorae
Heller 1911
;
Mus (Nannomys) grata
(Thomas and
Wroughton 1910
)
;
Mus (Nannomys) kasaica
(
Cabrera 1924
)
;
Mus (Nannomys) paulina
(Thomas 1918)
;
Mus (Nannomys) petila
Hollister 1916
;
Mus (Nannomys) soricoides
Heller 1914
;
Mus (Nannomys) sungarae
Heller 1911
;
Mus (Nannomys) sybilla
(Thomas 1918)
;
Mus (Nannomys) vicina
(Thomas 1910)
.
Distribution:
Subsaharan Africa (including
Ethiopia
and
Somalia
) southward to contact with
M. minutoides
(see preceeding account).
Conservation:
IUCN
– Critically Endangered as
M. kasaicus
, Lower Risk (lc) as
M. musculoides
.
Discussion:
Subgenus
Nannomys
. Whether samples reflect only one or a complex of species is unresolved.
Meester et al. (1986:283)
noted that Van der Straeten "regards
minutoides
as a complex of different species and considers East and West African taxa different from those occurring in Southern Africa." F.
Petter and Matthey (1975:3)
recognized only
M. minutoides
, noting that among all taxa referable to that species "... it is still impossible to recognize those which morphologically merit specific rank." Karyotypes, however, are more revealing, and by using them F.
Petter and Matthey (1975)
could distinguish the typical South African
minutoides
(2n = 18-19), populations from all of West Africa and a part of Central Africa (2n =18-34), and populations from southern East Africa (2n = 30). The taxon
grata
(or
gratus
) is often listed as a separate species (
Hatt, 1940
a
;
Hollister, 1919
; F.
Petter and Matthey, 1975
). Unresolved also is the geographic distributionof
M. musculoides
, and the nature of the biological relationship between it and
M. minutoides
. Samples from
Angola
and
Zambia
, for example, have not been critically studied to determine whether only one or both species are present (e.g., F.
Crawford-Cabral, 1998
;
Petter and Matthey, 1975
). The considerable chromosomal variation among samples from West Africa was documented by
Jotterand (1972)
,
Jotterand-Bellomo (1984
,
1986
), and
Matthey (1967
b
)
under the identification of
minutoides
/
musculoides
, a label that reflects current understanding of specific limits in this complex. Analyses of sequences from six genes indicate subgenus
Nannomys
, as represented by
M. musculoides
, is sister-group to subgenus
Pyromys
, which in turn phylogenetically connects with subgenus
Mus
(
Lundrigan et al., 2002
; as
minutoides
from
Kenya
).
Pertinent reviews covering taxonomy, morphology, distribution, and biology are available for populations in
Senegal
(
Duplantier and Granjon, 1992
);
Gambia
,
Sierra Leone
, and
Ghana
(
Grubb et al., 1998
); Accra Plains of S
Ghana
(
Decher and Bahian, 1999
);
Nigeria
(
Happold, 1987
); West Africa in general (
Rosevear, 1969
); S
Sudan
(
Setzer, 1956
);
Uganda
and
Kenya
(
Delany, 1975
;
Hollister, 1919
);
Tanzania
(
Swynnerton and Hayman, 1951
;
Stanley et al., 1998
; 2000, 2002);
Zambia
(
Ansell, 1978
);
Malawi
(
Ansell and Dowsett, 1988
); Dem. Rep.
Congo
(
Misonne, 1974
; specimens in
AMNH
);
Republic of Congo
(
Dowsett and Granjon, 1991
);
Angola
(
Crawford-Cabral, 1998
). Neither
Yalden et al. (1976
,
1996
) nor
Rupp (1980)
recorded
M. minutoides
from
Ethiopia
, but we have examined many specimens from that country (in
BMNH
and
FMNH
).
The taxon
kasaica
(
holotype
from Dem. Rep.
Congo
,
Kasaï
Occidental Province, Kananga [= Luluabourg]) was originally described as a subspecies of
Leggada bella
(
Cabrera, 1924
)
, but subsequently treated as a species of
Mus
belonging to the
M. sorella
group (F.
Petter, 1981
b
), an arrangement provisionally followed by
Musser and Carleton (1993)
. We place it in the synonymy of
M. minutoides
after Musser’s study of the
holotype
graciously sent to him by Dr. Josefina Barreiro of the Museo Nacional de Sciencias Naturales, Madrid. The skin and skull exhibit all the morphological traits characteristic of
M. musculoides
and none of the diagnostic features peculiar to species in the
M. sorella
group
.