Order Rodentia - Family Muridae
Author
Guy G. Musser
Author
Michael D. Carleton
text
1993
Smithsonian Institution Press
Washington and London
Editor
Don E. Wilson
Editor
DeeAnn M. Reeder
Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition)
501
755
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353098
1-56098-217-9
7353098
Bandicota indica
(Bechstein, 1800)
.
In
Pennant, Allgemeine Ueber Vierfuss. Thiere, 2:497
.
TYPE LOCALITY:
India
,
Pondicherry
.
DISTRIBUTION:
Sri Lanka
, peninsular
India
north to
Nepal
, NE
India
(
Assam
),
Burma
, S
China
(
Yunnan
and
Hong Kong
Isl),
Taiwan
,
Thailand
,
Laos
, and
Vietnam
. Introduced into Kedah and Perlis regions of Malay Peninsula (
Harrison, 1956
; J. T. Marshall, Jr.,
1977a)
as well as Sumatra and Java (
Musser and Newcomb, 1983
). Its spotty distribution may reflect other geographic introductions (
Taiwan
for example); "since it is commensal, large, and delicious to eat, this bandicoot may have been spread by man in comparatively recent times" (J. T. Marshall, Jr., 1977a:428).
SYNONYMS:
bandicota
(of Bechstein, 1800; see
Ellerman, 1941
),
elliotanus
,
eloquens
,
gigantea
,
jabouillei
, kagii,
macropus
,
malabarica
,
mordax
, nemorivaga, perchai, setifera,
siamensis
, taiwanus.
COMMENTS: Morphologically more closely related to
B.
savilei
than to
B.
bengalensis
,
but based on gel electrophoretic comparisons closer to
Nesokia
than to other species of
Bandicota
(
Radtke and Niethammer, 1984
/85). Chromosomal data for Thai samples provided by
Markvong et al. (1973)
. A careful systematic revision is necessary to assess the significance of morphological and biochemical variation among samples.
Pradhan et al. (1989)
, for example, argued that B.
gigantea
is specifically distinct from B.
indica,
and indicated they are pursuing a taxonomic revision of the genus.