White-toothed shrews (Mammalia, Soricomorpha, Crocidura) of coastal islands of Vietnam
Author
Abramov, Alexei V.
Author
Bannikova, Anna A.
Author
Rozhnov, Viatcheslav V.
text
ZooKeys
2012
207
37
47
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.207.3237
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.207.3237
1313-2970-207-37
Crocidura fuliginosa (Blyth, 1855)
We have found this species on Con Son Island only. A single specimen was collected near Nui Nha Ban on the north slope of Nui Chua Mt. in the central part of island. The pitfall traps (
08°42'49"N
,
106°37'13"E
) were set in moist primary forest at an elevation of 250 m asl. Despite considerable trapping efforts (more than 1200 trap
-
nights) we collected only one specimen. This species was firstly reported from Con Son by
Van Peenen et al. (1970)
. A single adult male (USNM 357348, Smithsonian Institution) was caught in a small Sherman trap at the side of a trail leading to Nui Nha Ban, at the elevation of 80 m asl. Another specimen (ZMMU S-144368, Zoological Museum of Moscow University) was collected in 1987 in the forest of Bai Canh Islet located just 1 km eastward of the Con Son Island.
This is a large, long-tailed
Crocidura
; tail 79% of head and body length, on average. Means and extremes of measurements (in mm) from 3 adults are: head and body length, 87.0 (83-90); tail length, 68.3 (67-71); hind foot length, 15.7 (15-17); weight (n=1), 16.7 g.
The mtDNA analysis suggests that specimen from the Con Son Island belongs to
Crocidura fuliginosa
(Fig. 2).
Many papers listed
Crocidura fuliginosa
as being widespread in mainland Vietnam (Heaney and Timm 1983;
Huynh et al. 1994
;
Kuznetsov 2006
;
Can et al. 2008
;
Jenkins et al. 2009
). A recent comparative study of mtDNA (
Bannikova et al. 2011
) did not confirm its occurrence in Vietnam. Specimens from northern Vietnam (Ha Giang Province) are very different from the shrews taken from the Cameron Highlands (Peninsular Malaysia) assigned to this species. Moreover, the northern Vietnamese specimens are close to the shrews from Yunnan, southern China. A major distinction between Yunnan specimens and
Crocidura fuliginosa
from Peninsular Malaysia was also found by
Dubey et al. (2008)
in the analysis of nuclear genes.
Bannikova et al. (2011)
proposed to re-establish the name
Crocidura dracula
for the large white-toothed shrews from northern Vietnam and southern China. This taxon was described by
Thomas (1912)
from southern Yunnan. According to
Allen (1938)
and
Ellerman and Morrison-Scott (1951)
, this species is distributed across southern China and adjacent Indochina.
Jenkins (1976)
considered dracula a subspecies of
Crocidura fuliginosa
, and was followed in this opinion by various authors (Heaney and Timm 1983;
Jiang and Hoffmann 2001
;
Hutterer 2005
). Based on the data from mitochondrial DNA, the name fuliginosa was provisionally restricted to the shrews from the southern part of Southeast Asia, including Malaysia and southern Myanmar (
Bannikova et al. 2011
). A comparison of cytb sequences suggests that specimen from the Con Son Island belongs to this haplogroup (Fig. 2). This is a first genetically confirmed record of
Crocidura fuliginosa
from Vietnam.
The occurrence of
Crocidura fuliginosa
sensu stricto in mainland Vietnam is still questionable (see also
Heaney and Timm 1983
).
Jenkins et al. (2009)
have mentioned museum specimens of
Crocidura fuliginosa
(= dracula sensu
Bannikova et al. 2011
) from Lao Cai in northern Vietnam and Yunnan in southern China only. Two other records mentioned by
Jenkins et al. (2009)
were based on survey reports, not on museum voucher specimens. One of them (
Trai et al. 1999
), reporting
Crocidura fuliginosa
from Ngoc Linh Mt. in Kon Tum Province, central Vietnam, was based on a visual observation only. Another location mentioned (see
Jenkins et al. 2009
) is Nui Bi Doup, Lam Dong Province, southern Vietnam. In 2004 and 2006, during mammal surveys in Ngoc Linh Mt. conducted by the VRTC, we collected 116 shrews of three
Crocidura
species (
Abramov et al. 2007b
;
Rozhnov and Abramov 2009
). Two of these species,
Crocidura sokolovi
and
Crocidura zaitsevi
,
were new to science (
Jenkins et al. 2007
); the third one was
Crocidura tanakae
(see
Bannikova et al. 2011
). Several biodiversity surveys conducted by the VRTC in Nui Bi Doup area in 2002-2009 (
Abramov et al. 2010
) yielded more than 100 shrews of three
Crocidura
species, including
Crocidura tanakae
,
Crocidura indochinensis
and
Crocidura zaitsevi
(see
Bannikova et al. 2011
). However, we documented no specimens of
Crocidura fuliginosa
, neither in the Ngoc Linh nor in the Bi Doup areas.