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
Subfamily
Murinae Illiger, 1815
.
Abh. Phys. Klasse K.-Preuss Akad. Wiss.
Berlin
, for 1804-11, p. 46,129
[1815].
SYNONYMS:
Anisomyini
, Conilurinae, Hydromyinae,
Murina
,
Phloeomyinae
,
Pseudomyinae
,
Rhynchomyinae
.
COMMENTS: Diagnosis, characteristics, and contents of subfamily generally as presented by
Carleton and Musser (1984)
. No general tribal arrangement of genera is available except for provincial groupings (Conilurini and Hydromyini for Australian species [summarized in
Watts and Aslin, 1981
] and
Anisomyini
for some New
Guinea
genera [
Lidicker and Brylski, 1987
]).
Acomys
and
Uranomys
would be excluded from the subfamily by some (see those accounts). Comparative chromosomal data provided in phylogenetic framework and other contexts for European species by
Zima and Kràl (1984a)
, for some Asian groups by
Markvong et al. (1973)
,
Raman and Sharma (1977)
,
Gadi and Sharma (1983)
, and
Cao and Tran (1984)
, for African species by
Robbins and Baker (1978)
, for Australian forms by Baverstock et al. (1977c-e, 1983a,
b), for
New
Guinea
species by
Donnellan (1987)
, and for murines in general by ViegasPequignot et al. (1983, 1985, 1986). Phylogenetic relationships among Australian species based on biochemical results reported by
Baverstock et al. (1977
a,
b,
1980
) and
Watts et al. (1992)
, those among other species reported by
Iskandar and Bonhomme (1984)
and
Bonhomme et al. (1985)
. DNA-DNA hybridization results reported in phylogenetic context by
Catzeflis (1990)
and
Catzeflis et al. (1987)
. Amplification of DNA (LI) in relationship to murine divergence from other muroids reported by
Pascale et al. (1990)
. Comparative data on hair morphology (
Keogh, 1985
), soft palate topography (
Eisentraut, 1969a
; Foiling, 1992), and digestive system anatomy (
Perrin and Curtis, 1980
) provided results for phylogenetic analyses. The discrepency between the relativley rapid divergence of murine taxa as revealed by fossils and the much slower rates indicated by molecular data is reconciled by
Jaeger et al. (1986)
by postulating accelerated rates of evolution for certain proteins and a higher rate of nucleotide substitution in murines than ordinarily seen in other eutherians.