Order Rodentia - Family Muridae
Author
Guy G. Musser
Author
Michael D. Carleton
text
1993
Smithsonian Institution Press
Washington and London
Editor
Don E. Wilson
Editor
DeeAnn M. Reeder
Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition)
501
755
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353098
1-56098-217-9
7353098
Rattus tiomanicus
(Miller, 1900)
.
Proc.
Washington
Acad. Sci., 2:212
.
TYPE LOCALITY:
Malaysia
,
Pahang
, Tioman Isl, off the east coast Malay Peninsula
.
DISTRIBUTION: Endemic to the Sunda Shelf and some offshore islands. Records on the Shelf are from peninsular
Thailand
south of Isthmus of Kra (
10°30'N
), the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, Bali, Borneo, Palawan, and many smaller islands. Off the Sunda Shelf,
R. tiomanicus
is documented from Enggano Isl, southwest of Sumatra, and Maratua Arch., east of Borneo (Musser and Calafia, 1982; Musser and Heaney, 1985).
SYNONYMS:
ambersoni, banguei, batin,
blangorum
, delirius, ducis, generatius,
jalorensis
,
jarak
, jemuris,
julianus
, kabanicus, kunduris, lamucotanus, lasurius, luxuriosus,
maerens
, mangalumis,
mara
, pauper, payanus, pemanggis, perhentianus, pharus, piperis, rhionis,
roa
, roquei, rumpia, sabae, sebasianus,
siantanicus
, sribuatensis,
tambelanicus
, tenggolensis, terutavensis,
tingius
,
tua
, vernalus, viclana.
COMMENTS: Reviewed by
Musser and Califia (1982)
, who also summarized and provided references documenting the incorrect historical association of
tiomanicus
and the other synonyms listed here as subspecies of
R. rattus
.
They also pointed out that a careful study of interisland variation among named forms of the
R.
tiomanicus
complex is necessary before relationships among the insular populations can be discerned; more than one species, for example, may be represented in what is now viewed as
R.
tiomanicus
.
Rattus mindorensis
from Mindoro Island in the
Philippines
, R.
simalurensis
from the islands of Babi, Lasia, Siumat, and Simalule, off the northwest coast of Sumatra; and R. burrus from some of the
Nicobar islands
are also morphologically very similar to the R.
tiomanicus
complex and should be considered part of it (Musser, 1986; Musser and Heaney, 1985). Whether they are species or island forms of R.
tiomanicus
has yet to be determined.