Order Rodentia - Family Myoxidae
Author
Mary Ellen Holden
text
1993
Smithsonian Institution Press
Washington and London
Editor
Don E. Wilson
Editor
DeeAnn M. Reeder
Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition)
763
770
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353102
1-56098-217-9
7353102
Graphiurus murinus
(Desmarest, 1822)
.
Mammalogie,
in
Encyclop. Méth., 2(Suppl.):542
.
TYPE LOCALITY:
South Africa
,
Cape
of Good Hope
.
DISTRIBUTION:
Sudan
(
Setzer, 1956
),
Uganda
(
Delany, 1975
),
Ethiopia
(
Corbet and Yalden, 1972
;
Yalden et al., 1976
),
Kenya
(
Hollister, 1919
),
Tanzania
(
Swynnerton and Hayman, 1951
),
Malawi
(
Ansell and Dowsett, 1988
;
Ansell, 1989b
),
Mozambique
(
Smithers and Tello, 1976
), E
Zaire
(
Rahm and Christiaensen, 1963
), S
Angola
,
Zambia
,
Zimbabwe
(
Smithers and Wilson, 1979
),
Botswana
(
Smithers, 1971
), E and N
Namibia
, southern Africa (
de Graaff, 1981
;
Roberts, 1951
;
Skinner and Smithers, 1990
).
SYNONYMS:
alticola, butteri, cineraceus, cinerascens, dasilvai, erythrobronchus, etoschae, griselda, isolatus, lalandianus, littoralis, marrensis, pretoriae, raptor,
saturatus
, schneideri, selindensis, soleatus, streeteri, sudanensis, tzaneenensis, vandami, vulcanicus, woosnami, zuluensis
(see
Allen, 1939
, and
Setzer, 1956
, for citations).
COMMENTS: The synonyms (and therefore the distribution) listed here for
G.
murinus
almost certainly contain names which are actually synonyms of G.
microtis
and other species, but pending systematic revision they cannot be confidently separated here, and are kept in their traditional listing under
murinus
.
Meester et al. (1986)
broke
murinus
into three subspecies:
murinus
,
microtis
and
griselda.
Though
microtis
is considered a valid species here and in
Ansell (1989a
,
b)
and
Ansell and Dowsett (1988)
, the allocation of synonyms listed under this name in
Meester et al. (1986)
has yet to be documented. Three different karyotypes were found in the
G. murinus
group in southern Africa (
Dippenaar et al., 1983
), providing another indication of the complexity of the relationships of named forms traditionally placed in this species.