Soricidae
Author
Russell A. Mittermeier
Author
Don E. Wilson
text
2018
2018-07-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 8 Insectivores, Sloths and Colugos
332
551
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6870843
978-84-16728-08-4
6870843
191.
Sr1 Lankan Highland Shrew
Suncus montanus
French:
Pachyure des montagnes
/
German:
Hochland-Moschusspitzmaus
/
Spanish:
Musarana de tierras altas de Sri Lanka
Other common names:
Asian Highland Shrew
,
Black Shrew-mouse
,
Hill Shrew
,
Montane Shrew
Taxonomy.
Sorex montanus Kelaart, 1850
,
Pidurutalagala
,
Nuwara Eliya
,
Sri Lanka
.
G. B. Corbet and J. E. Hill in 1992 regarded S.
montanus
as a distinct species from S.
murinus
and questioned the conspecific status of the Indian S.
niger
and the Sri Lankan S.
montanus
. R. Hutterer in 2005 considered that S.
montanus
niger
represented a distinct subspecies. In a study of mitochondrial genes, S. Meegaskumbura and C. J. Schneider
in 2008 concluded that S.
montanus
from Sri Lanka was a separate species from S.
niger
from India and that S.
montanus
and S.
murinus
were sister taxa. Subsequently, Meegaskumbura and colleagues in 2010 studied several different populations of §.
montanus
and S.
murinus
from Sri Lanka in an analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial genes and morphometric data. Much earlier in 1980, W. W. A. Phillips had reported that interbreeding was known to occur in Sri Lanka between S.
montanus
(at that time considered to be a subspecies, S.
murinus
montanus
) and other subspecies of S.
murinus
, and indeed, Meegaskumbura and colleagues found that two populations showed possible hybridization between S.
montanus
and S.
murinus
kandianus. Their combined analysis of all nuclear and mitochondrial genes provided high support for S.
montanus
and S.
murinus
kandianus as sisters, separate from a clade of the other subspecies of S.
murinus
from Sri Lanka. An additional study of mitochondrial genes by S. D. Ohdachi and colleagues in 2016 also concluded that S.
montanus
wassister to a clade of S.
murinus
from Sri Lanka (from three different locations in Kandy) and that this clade (S.
murinus
kandianus—S.
montanus
complex) formed a sister to clades of the majority of S.
murinus
from many Asian and other locations including two separate clades from Sri Lanka. Monotypic.
Distribution.
Recorded from few localities in Central and Sabaragamuwa provinces, including Sinharaja Forest, Sri Lanka.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 72-106 mm, tail 46-71 mm, ear 7-13 mm, hindfoot 14-19 mm. No specific data are available for body weight. The Sri Lankan Highland Shrew is medium-sized, with short, soft pelage, being dark brown to blackish brown dorsally and slightly lighter ventrally; some specimens have slight rufous tinge. Tailis 52-80% of head-body length and dark brown, with long bristle hairs scattered over most of its length.
Habitat.
Highland montane forest and tropical rainforests in low hills, in undergrowth, rotting logs and leaves, vegetation bordering streams, and only rarely human dwellings close to forests, at elevations of 150-2524 m.
Food and Feeding.
Captive Sri Lankan Highland Shrews ate a wide variety of insects including beetles, cockroaches, grasshoppers and large moths and also worms, bird eggs, lizard eggs, seeds, coconut, small snakes, and a young mouse (
Mus
). Food is held down by forefeet while biting off pieces. It has been speculated that shrews found half eaten after being caught in deadfall traps overnight had been cannibalized or eaten by other species of shrews.
Breeding.
Wild-caught pregnant Sri Lankan Highland Shrews with two fetuses were found in early December,late June, and earlyJuly. Young are reportedly born in nests of dead leaves and grass in rough chambers at ends of short burrows, usually under a tree stump or boulder among low vegetation. During the breeding season, basal part of tail becomes markedly swollen, and lateral glands become enlarged and produce distinctive musky odor.
Activity patterns.
The Sri Lankan Highland Shrew is principally but not exclusively nocturnal. Individuals trapped at night were dead before morning, suggesting the need for frequent activity to feed regularly.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Vulnerable on The IUCN Red List. The Sri Lankan Highland Shrew occurs in restricted and fragmented locations, and there is ongoing decline in area and quality of habitat due to anthropogenic activities. Nevertheless, the Sri Lankan Highland Shrew needs to be reassessed following recognition of the Nilgiri Highland Shrew (i.e. Indian S.
niger
) as a separate species.
Bibliography.
Corbet & Hill (1992), Hutterer (2005b), Meegaskumbura & Schneider (2008), Meegaskumbura et al. (2010), Menike et al. (2012), Molur, Nameer & Goonatilake (2008a), Molur, Srinivasulu et al. (2005), Ohdachi et al. (2016), Phillips (1928, 1980), Yapa & Ratnavira (2013).