Order Rodentia - Family Spalacidae
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
907
926
book chapter
0-8018-8221-4
10.5281/zenodo.7316535
Eospalax
G. M. Allen 1938
Eospalax
G. M.
Allen 1938
,
Mammals of
China
and
Mongolia
, Nat. Hist. Central Asia, Vol. 2, pt. 1: vii
.
Type Species:
Siphneus fontanieri
Milne-Edwards 1867
Synonyms:
Allosiphneus
Kretzoi 1961
;
Zokor
Ellerman 1941
.
Species and subspecies:
3 species:
Species
Eospalax fontanierii
(
Milne-Edwards 1867
)
Species
Eospalax rothschildi
(Thomas 1911)
Species
Eospalax smithii
(Thomas 1911)
Discussion:
Extant and extinct species recorded only from
China
. Phylogenetic relationships reviewed by
Lawrence (1991
, as
Myospalax
; see above discussion) and
Zheng (1994)
, both of whom brought together
fontanieri
,
rothschildi
, and
smithi
in a cluster defined by a suite of derived morphological features (convex occipital shield, long incisive foramina bisected by premaxillary-maxillary suture, carotid canal at basioccipital-basisphenoid suture, configuration of pterygoid fossa, hypsodent and rootless molars). All three have always been recognized as species, usually grouped at the species-group or subgeneric level (G. M. Allen, 1940;
Corbet, 1978
c
;
Kuzhyakin, 1965
;
Leroy, 1940
). The three were carefully described by G. M. Allen (1940), who also provided distributional and habitat information.
Zheng (1994)
recognized
Allosiphneus
for the extinct species
arvicolinus
, which has rootless molars and belongs in this group, but the traits distinguishing this genus define only a different species to us. He also included an assemblage of rooted species sorted into the genera
Prosiphneus
,
Myotalpavus
, and
Pliosiphneus
. We do not appreciate the cladistic support for the latter two and include them in
Prosiphneus
. The distinguishing traits among them are not nearly of the same magnitude as those between
Eospalax
,
Myospalax
, and
Mesosiphneus
;
Prosiphneus
thus contains extinct species with rooted molars.
Lawrence (1991:282)
did not recognize this dichotomy: "Placing species that have not achieved complete rootless hypsodonty in the separate genus
Prosiphneus
is an artifical division of a monophyletic group." Her conclusion was influenced by study of fossil
youngi
, which at the time was included in
Prosiphneus
, and her analysis placed it in the same group as
Myospalax
, an arrangement also proposed by
Zheng (1994)
. Lawrence otherwise did not have available any of the species placed in
Prosiphneus
by Zheng, and we cannot assess the generic validity from Zheng’s report because he offered no diagnosis or definition of it. Until phylogenetic relationships among the extinct species with rooted molars in
Prosiphneus
and those extant and extinct forms in
Eospalax
are illuminated, the two genera should be retained. If shown to be congeneric,
Eospalax
G. M.
Allen (1939)
would be replaced by
Prosiphneus
Tielhard
de Chardin (1926)
.