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
Apodemus witherbyi
Thomas 1902
Apodemus witherbyi
Thomas 1902
,
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, 10: 490
.
Type Locality:
S
Iran
,
Fars Province
, Shul (see
Lay, 1967
, for coordinates).
Vernacular Names:
Steppe Field Mouse
.
Synonyms:
Apodemus caessareanus
Bate 1942
;
Apodemus chorassanicus
(Ognev and Heptner 1928)
;
Apodemus falzfeini
Mezhzherin and Zagorodnyuk 1989
;
Apodemus fulvipectus
(Ognev 1924)
;
Apodemus hermonensis
Filippucci, Simson, and Nevo 1989
;
Apodemus iconicus
Heptner 1948
;
Apodemus kilikiae
Kretzoi 1964
;
Apodemus planicola
(Sviridenko 1936)
;
Apodemus saxatilis
Krassovsky 1929
;
Apodemus saxatilis
(Sviridenko 1936)
;
Apodemus tauricus
(Barret-Hamilton 1900)
.
Distribution:
Plains, mountain and plateau steppes, and highland semideserts (not found in desert depressions) from E of the Dnepr River in the S
Ukraine
,
Crimea
, N Caucasus, S Caucasus (
Georgia
,
Armenia
, and Azerbaijan), Anatolian Turkish steppe and Bozcaada Isl (Kryštufek and Vohralík, 2001; specimens in
USNM
); south to N
Israel
and NW
Jordan
(Benda and Sádlová, 1999); through most of C and N
Iran
in provinces of Azarbayjan (
FMNH
and
USNM
material),
Kordestan
(
FMNH
and
USNM
),
Ilam
(series in
FMNH
),
Lorestan
(large samples in
AMNH
,
FMNH
, and
USNM
),
Isfahan
(
FMNH
material),
Fars
(
FMNH
),
Semnan
(
FMNH
97469),
Tehran
(
FMNH
341459), C and E
Mazandaran
(
FMNH
and
USNM
), N and E
Khorasan
(
AMNH
,
FMNH
, and
USNM
material); Kopet-Dag Mtns of SW
Turkmenistan
; and eastward in WC
Pakistan
, (about
90 km
NE Quetta,
USNM
specimens); probably also occurs in
Afghanistan
, NE
Iraq
, and
Lebanon
and adjacent SW
Syria
. Distribution, which is southeast of range of
A. sylvaticus
, derived from specimens in
AMNH
,
FMNH
, and
USNM
and published reports (
Filippucci et al., 1989
;
Mezhzherin, 1997a:33
;
Mezhzherin and Zagorodnyuk, 1989
;
Zagorodnyuk et al., 1997:39
).
Conservation:
IUCN
– Endangered as
A. hermonensis
, Lower Risk (lc) as
A. fulvipectus
.
Discussion:
Sylvaemus
group. The taxon
witherbyi
was originally described as a subspecies of
Mus sylvaticus
, subsequently arranged as a subspecies of
A. sylvaticus
(
Ellerman, 1941
)
, treated as a synonym of
A. sylvaticus arianus
(
Ellerman and Morrison-Scott, 1951
)
or
A. sylvaticus
(
Corbet, 1978
c
)
, and listed as a synonym of
A. arianus
(
Musser and Carleton, 1993
;
Pavlinov et al., 1995
a
).
Zagorodnyuk (1996
a
)
finally identified the
holotype
as an example of
A. uralensis
. This is the species identified as
A. arianus
by
Musser and Carleton (1993)
, who separated it from
A. sylvaticus
on the basis of its distinctive pelage and smaller body size. Recently,
Zagorodnyuk (1996
a
)
,
Zagorodnyuk et al. (1997)
, and
Mezhzherin (1997
a
)
elucidated the morphological and distributional boundaries of
A. witherbyi
(as
arianus
) and their definition incorporates the names and ranges of
fulvipectus
,
falzfeini
, and
hermonensis
, each of which has been treated as a species by various authors (
Chelomina et al., 1998
a
;
Filippucci et al. 1989
, 1996;
Mezhzherin and Zagorodnyuk, 1989
;
Musser and Carleton, 1993
).
Mezhzherin and Zagorodnyuk (1989)
described
falzfeini
as a species, which O. Rossolimo (in litt.) considered to be the same as
A. fulvipectus
. Subsequent results from genetic studies led
Mezhzherin and Zykov (1991)
to treat
falzfeini
as identical with
chorassanicus
, which was originally described as a subspecies of
A. sylvaticus
; the identity of
chorassanicus
with
fulvipectus
and
hermonensis
is supported by allozymic data (see
Filippucci et al., 2002:407
).
Vorontsov et al. (1992)
recognized
fulvipectus
as the oldest name for this species; it was one of the distinct electrophoretic forms in the Caucasus revealed by
Vorontsov et al. (1989)
.
Apodemus hermonensis
was described from the alpine "tragacanthic" belt at about
2000 m
on Mt Hermon and was considered to be morphologically and genetically closely related to
A. flavicollis
, which it displaces on Mt Hermon (and possibly also
Lebanon
and Antilebanon mountain ranges) at elevations above
1900 m
(
Filippucci et al., 1989
). Based on allozymic and morphological data,
hermonensis
was subsequently identified from Anatolian
Turkey
and N
Iran
and suspected to be synonymous with
fulvipectus
(Filippucci et al., 1996; Macholán et al., 2001
b
);
Michaux et al. (2002
a
)
, however, retained the two as separate species based upon analysis of mtDNA cytochrome
b
sequences.
Kryštufek (2002
a
) has convincingly demonstrated that the
holotype
of
arianus
is an example of
A. flavicollis
, that the
holotype
of
tauricus
Barrett-Hamilton, 1900
, is the same as
hermonensis
, and is an older name but preoccupied by
tauricus
Pallas, 1811
, which is associated with
A. flavicollis
. He suggested that
iconicus
Heptner, 1948
was the oldest available name for the species, but also noted that the
holotype
of
witherbyi
Thomas, 1902
might be identical with
hermonensis
. The
holotype
is similar to
hermonensis
in all external, cranial, and dental traits (including the stephanodont pattern on M1), except for its longer bullae (4.8 mm) and shorter molar row (3.4 mm), and Kryštufek was reluctant to declare
witherbyi
and
hermonensis
as being the same. Two specimens we studied from the Zagros Mtns of W
Iran
,
USNM
369849 (Baneh, Kordistan Province) and
USNM
350595 (Borujerd region,
Luristan Province
), have all the chromatic and morphological attributes of
hermonensis
; molar row is 3.5 mm in the former, bullar length is 4.8 mm in the latter. Like these two, the
holotype
of
witherbyi
is at one end of the range of variation in lengths of molar row and bullae. We use
witherbyi
as the oldest name for what has been called
arianus
(
Musser and Carleton, 1993
;
Zagorodnyuk et al., 1997
;
Mezhzherin, 1997a
),
hermonensis
,
fulvipectus
or
iconicus
(Filippucci et al., 1996; Kryštufek and Vohralík, 2001); no other species of
Apodemus
occurs in the
Fars region
, and all of its other traits match those of
hermonensis
and the other material we assemble here.
Apodemus witherbyi
may be the species represented by the sample from Qazvin, N
Iraq
, that
Darviche et al. (1979)
separated electrophoretically from
A. sylvaticus
and
A. flavicollis
, but still considered closer to the latter. A close alliance between
A. flavicollis
and
A. witherbyi
is supported by other studies employing protein electrophoresis (
Filippucci et al., 1989
, 2002; Macholán et al., 2001
b
;
Mezhzherin, 1997
a
) and discriminant function analysis of morphometric traits (
Frynta et al., 2001
), but not mtDNA cytochrome
b
gene sequences in which
A. witherbyi
is isolated within subgenus
Sylvaemus
(
Michaux et al., 2002
a
; reported as
A. hermonensis
). Included in Mezhzherin’s (1997
a
) revision of N Eurasian
Apodemus
. Compared (as
A. fulvipectus
) with
A. ponticus
and
A. argenteus
by restriction analysis of nuclear DNA (
Chelomina et al., 1995
), and with
A. ponticus
and
A. uralensis
by comparison of isozymic, chromosomal and molecular divergence (
Chelomina et al., 1998
a
). Phylogenetic affinity of
A. witherbyi
requires sharper resolution, particularly concerning the nature of the relationship with
A. pallipes
from the Pamirs and Himalayas and the Himalayan
A. rusiges
.
Easternmost record of
A. witherbyi
is from the Quetta region of WC
Pakistan
, and the
four specimens
from there match those in the large samples from
Iran
in chromatic traits, cranial morphology, and molar occlusal patterns. In
Iran
,
A. witherbyi
is the most widespread
Apodemus
, occurs syntopically with
A. flavicollis
in the Zagros Mtns, and is altitudinally parapatric with
A. hyrcanicus
(see those accounts); these are the only three
Apodemus
currently recorded from
Iran
.
Lay (1967:186)
noted that a bright, small
Apodemus
, and a larger, darker species occur in N
Iran
, and considered them ecological subspecies; the brighter one is
A. witherbyi
, the darker
A. hycanicus
(see that account).
Apodemus witherbyi
,
A. mystacinus
, and
A. flavicollis
are the only
Apodemus
that now occur in
Israel
(see accounts of latter two).
Tchernov (1968
,
1979
,
1986
,
1996
) has identified fossilized
Apodemus
recovered from Pleistocene Israeli cave sediments. Three size classes of molars are represented. Tchernov identified the largest as
A. mystacinus
, the next in size as
A. flavicollis
, and the smallest as
A. sylvaticus
(
Tchernov, 1986:263
)
, which he regarded as part of the modern Israeli fauna. He (
Tchernov, 1986
) also synonymized Bate’s (1942
b
) Pleistocene
A. caesareanus
with
A. sylvaticus
. The latter, however, does not occur in
Israel
or anywhere in the Middle East (
Filippucci et al., 1989
; Macholán et al., 2001
b
), and Kryštufek (2002, in litt.) thinks the smallest morphotype in the Pleistocene samples represents
A. witherbyi
, not
A. sylvaticus
. We agree. Certainly the illustrations of
caesareanus
molar rows (
Tchernov, 1968:52
, 54) exhibit some of the traits characteristic of
A. witherbyi
and the molars are similar in dimensions (Filippucci et al., 1996; Kryštufek, 2002
a
)
.