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
Eliomys melanurus
(Wagner, 1839)
.
Gelehrte Anz. I. K. Bayer. Akad. Wiss., München, 8(37):299
.
TYPE LOCALITY:
Sinai
(restricted to Mt.
Sinai
by
Nader et al., 1983
)
.
DISTRIBUTION: S
Turkey
(
Misonne, 1957
),
Syria
(Kahmann, 1981),
Iraq
(Kahmann, 1981;
Nadachowski et al., 1978
),
Jordan
(
Atallah, 1978
;
Bodenheimer, 1958
; Kahmann, 1981;
Tristram, 1877
),
Lebanon
(G. M. Allen, 1915;
Lewis et al., 1967
),
Israel
(
Bodenheimer, 1958
; Hani and Shalmon, 1983; Kahmann, 1981),
Saudi Arabia
(Kahmann, 1981; Nader et al., 1981;
Vesey-Fitzgerald, 1953
; also
Harrison and Bates, 1991
), the
Sinai
penin. (
Haim and Tchernov, 1974
;
Osborn and Helmy, 1980
;
Wassif and Hoogstraal, 1954
; Kahmann, 1981),
Egypt
(
Osborn and Helmy, 1980
),
Libya
(
Ranck, 1968
),
Tunisia
(
Kahmann and Thoms, 1987
),
Algeria
(
Kowalski and Rzebik-Kowalska, 1991
),
Morocco
(
Moreno and Delibes, 1981
). Also, in N Africa, see
Niethammer (1959)
.
SYNONYMS:
cyrenaicus
, denticulatus, larotina, larotinus,
munbyanus
, occidentalis, tunetae
(see
Ellerman and Morrison-Scott, 1951
;
Corbet, 1978c
).
COMMENTS: Systematics of Moroccan population examined by
Moreno (1989)
and
Moreno and Delibes (1981)
; comparative study of African populations by
Kahmann and Thoms (1973b)
; descriptions of type specimens, karyotypes, color plates of skins, and biology of
melanurus
group provided by
Kahmann and Thoms (1981)
; os penis figured by
Didier (1953)
; biometric study of Tunesian populations by
Kahmann and Thoms (1987)
; chromosomal data provided by
Delibes et al. (1980)
,
Dutrillaux (1986)
,
Filippucci et al. (1988
a, b, 1990
), and
Tranier and Petter (1978)
.
Allozyme data given by Filippucci et al. (1988c) indicated that N African and Middle Eastern populations form a monophyletic group, and supported the recognition of
melanurus
as a distinct species of
Eliomys
.
This hypothesis is tentatively followed here, but is based on few samples and needs corroboration. A critical morphological study of
Eliomys
throughout its range is needed.