Order Rodentia - Family Nesomyidae
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
930
955
book chapter
0-8018-8221-4
10.5281/zenodo.7316535
Nesomyinae Major 1897
Nesomyinae
Major 1897
,
Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1897: 718
.
Synonyms:
Brachytarsomyes
Ellerman 1941
;
Brachyuromyes
Ellerman 1941
;
Eliuri
Ellerman 1941
;
Gymnuromyinae
Ellerman 1941
;
Nesomyini
Vorontsov 1959
.
Genera:
9 genera with 23 species:
Genus
Brachytarsomys
Günther 1875
(2 species)
Genus
Brachyuromys
Major 1896
(2 species)
Genus
Eliurus
Milne Edwards 1885
(10 species)
Genus
Gymnuromys
Major 1896
(1 species)
Genus
Hypogeomys
A. Grandidier 1869
(1 species)
Genus
Macrotarsomys
Milne-Edwards and G. Grandidier 1898
(2 species)
Genus
Monticolomys
Carleton and Goodman 1996
(1 species)
Genus
Nesomys
Peters 1870
(3 species)
Genus
Voalavo
Carleton and Goodman 1998
(1 species)
Discussion:
Emended definition—Muroid rodents in which the jugal is large, spanning most of the middle zygomatic arch (
Major, 1897
); the tongue retains three circumvallate papillae (
Tullberg, 1899
;
Vorontsov, 1967
); and the enamel face of the lower incisors bears two low and inconspicuous ridges, close-set in parallel and positioned mediolaterally (confirmed by
MDC
in all nine genera).
Group exceedingly diverse morphologically (see
Carleton and Musser, 1984:341-2
), but the above characters, in combination, uniquely define nesomyines among assemblages of living muroids. Jugal size and number of circumvallate papillae are probably primitive conditions, but the acquisition of various lower incisor ornamentations is thought derived (
Flynn et al., 1985
; L. D.
Martin, 1980
). Similar longitudinal incisor ridges are also found in certain cricetomyines among extant groups, and in the extinct Miocene African genera
Afrocricetodon
,
Notocricetodon
, and
Protarsomys
(
Flynn et al., 1985
;
Lavocat, 1973
). The morphological diversity of Madagascar’s native rodents has questioned their monophyletic origin and prompted numerous classificatory arrangements (see discussions in
Carleton and Musser, 1984
;
Jansa and Carleton, 2003
a
). Proponents of a single ancestral origin have usually arranged nesomyines as a subfamily or tribe within
Cricetidae
(e.g.,
Miller and Gidley, 1918
;
Simpson, 1945
;
Vorontsov, 1959
) or as a subfamily within a broadly defined
Nesomyidae
, which includes African groups such as cricetomyines, tachyoryctines, and
Mystromys
(
Chaline et al., 1977
;
Lavocat, 1978
).
Ellerman (1941
, 1949) was convinced that nesomyines are polyphyletic and dispersed the genera among five subfamilies of
Muridae
sensu lato
.
Recent studies of DNA-DNA hybridization and genetic sequence data, although not finally resolving all aspects of the debate, persuasively demonstrate that Ellerman’s radical classificatory treatment is untenable. Surveys of few nesomyine taxa, using DNA hybridization or nuclear genes, have supported monophyly of
Nesomyinae
(
DuBois et al., 1996
;
Michaux and Catzeflis, 2000
;
Michaux et al., 2001
b
); whereas, results based on dense taxonomic sampling, using a mitochondrial gene, have disclosed paraphyly, although most nesomyine genera were associated closely within two clades (
Jansa et al., 1999
). According to phylogenetic interpretations of nuclear genes,
Michaux et al. (2001
b
)
depicted
Nesomyinae
(two genera sampled) as a basal clade with other African groups (
Cricetomyinae
,
Dendromurinae
,
Mystromyinae
), a result that supplies some empirical support for Lavocat’s (1973, 1978) concept of a family
Nesomyidae
that embraces the archaic remnants of an African radiation dating to the early Miocene or late Oligocene (also see
Carleton and Musser, 1984:344
).
Living members endemic to
Madagascar
, known only from late Quaternary and subfossil Holocene deposits (
McKenna and Bell, 1997
). One Miocene occurrence, described from Africa, however, appreciably extends the fossil history of the group, if the identification proves true.
Lavocat (1978)
viewed
Protarsomys
, early Miocene of
Kenya
, as close to the ancestry of Malagasy
Nesomyinae
, and
Chaline et al. (1977)
emphasized that relationship by placing the Miocene fossil in synonymy under extant
Macrotarsomys
, as did F.
Petter (1990)
. Others have questioned so close an affinity and specifically disputed their generic equivalence (
Carleton and Goodman, 1996:246-249
, 252).
Macrotarsomys
represents a morphology that evolved in situ, coincident with formation of the island’s dry western landscapes. Whether
Protarsomys
is a distant phylogenetic relative to extant nesomyines must await additional critical review of Miocene taxa and-or future discoveries.
Brachyuromys
, otherwise known only from the Recent of
Madagascar
, was mistakenly recorded from the late Miocene of
Namibia
(
Conroy et al., 1992
), together with
Myocricetodon
,
Notocricetodon
, and
Protarsomys
, but this fossil was subsequently reidentified as an extinct spalacid genus,
Harasibomys
(
Mein et al., 2000
a
)
.
Thomas (1915)
in erecting the replacement name
Majoria
(for
Myoryctes
Major, 1908
) uncritically stated that it represented "a fossil Madagascan rodent," an association just as uncritically perpetuated by others (
Simpson, 1945
;
Vorontsov, 1959
;
Carleton and Musser, 1984
); the
holotype
is an innominate bone of
Plesiorycteropus
, a member of the extinct order
Bibymalagasia
(see
MacPhee, 1994
).
Ellerman (1949) provided the first critical synopsis of nesomyine taxa, with subsequent descriptions and taxonomic arrangements updated by F.
Petter (1972
c
,
1975
a
). Resurgence in field and museum studies over the past decade has vastly improved taxonomic, distributional, and ecological knowledge of nesomyines (
Carleton, 1994
;
Carleton and Goodman, 1996
, 1998, 2000;
Carleton and Schmidt, 1990
;
Goodman and Carleton, 1996
, 1998;
Goodman and Soarimalala, 2002
; Goodman et al., 1996, 1999
b
;
Ryan et al., 1993
;
Soarimalala et al., 2001
), as summarized for all species in
Goodman and Benstead (2003)
. Conservation concerns associated with introduced
Rattus
populations and their impact upon native rodents discussed by
Goodman (1995)
.