Molecular relationships of the Israeli shrews (Eulipotyphla: Soricidae) based on cytochrome b sequences
Author
Shpirer, Erez
Author
Haddas-Sasson, Michal
Author
Spivak-Glater, Maya
Author
Feldstein, Tamar
Author
Meiri, Shai
Author
Huchon, Dorothée
text
Mammalia
2021
Warsaw, Poland
2020-08-17
85
1
79
89
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/mammalia-2019-0143
journal article
10.1515/mammalia-2019-0143
1864-1547
7837749
4.1
Crocidura ramona
Our work, based on sequences from
type
specimens, corroborates the view that
C. ramona
is a distinct species and probably endemic to
Israel
and the
West Bank
(
Dubey et al. 2008
;
Ivanitskaya et al. 1996
).
C. ramona
has been suggested to be related to the Palearctic “flat-headed rockshrews” (i.e.,
Crocidura pergrisea
,
C.arispa
,
Crocidura armenica
,
Crocidura serezkyensis
and
C. zarudnyi
) (
Burgin et al. 2018b
; Kry
Š
tufek and Vohralík 2001). Although the DNA of most of the latter has not yet been sequenced, our analysis indicates that
C. ramona
and
C. zarudnyi
are distantly related (
Figure 2
). Similarly, we have shown here that
C. ramona
is not closely related to another silvery-gray shrew –
C. nana
, as the two formed two distinct and distant clades in our phylogenetic analyses (Supplementary
Figure S1
). We note that there is some doubt regarding
C. nana
’s distribution. It is usually considered to be restricted to
Somalia
and
Ethiopia
(
Cassola 2019
;
Hutterer 2005
), whereas the samples sequenced in this work originated from
Tanzania
. We cannot be certain therefore that
C. nana
is the correct species assignment for the Tanzanian samples that we sequenced.
Because no morphological comparisons have been carried out between the skulls of
C. katinka
and
C. ramona
, the exact relationship between these two species remains to be determined. Although
C. katinka
has been suggested to be related to certain African species with cranial similarities (e.g.,
Crocidura bottegi
,
C. obscurior
,
Crocidura bottegoides
) (
Burgin et al. 2018b
;
Hutterer and Kock 2002
), our analyses have demonstrated that
C. ramona
is unrelated to
C. obscurior
.
It is also possible that
C. ramona
is conspecific with
C. portali
.
Thomas (1920)
described
C. portali
as a small shrew (“though not excessively so”), with “pale drab-grey” pelage; and indicated that it has “clearly nothing to do with the
C. russula
group”. The gross morphology of the
holotype
(BMNH #19.4.11.9) and its size agree with
C. ramona
– though a detailed examination is still needed in order to confirm or refute this. Kry
Š
tufek and Vohralík (2001) suggested that
C. portali
may be a valid species, related to
Crocidura arispa
(and other members of the
pergrisea
group), and a senior synonym of
C. ramona
.
Hutterer and Kock (2002)
indicated that
C. ramona
and
C. portali
are similar in skull dimensions as well as in pelage, but note that they are also similar to
C. gmelini
, a species that they note requires “a better definition”.
C. gmelini
(ranging from
Iran
to
Mongolia
) has been synonymized with
C. suaveolens
,
a species distantly related to
C. ramona
(
Figure 2
).
C. arispa
,
C. ramona
,
and
C. katinka
are currently all considered valid species, while
C. portali
is not (
Burgin et al. 2018b
;
IUCN 2020
). Clearly, a taxonomic revision of these taxa is warranted. Neither the DNA of the
C. portali
type, nor that of any shrews identified as
C. arispa
,
C. pergrisea
, or
C. katinka
,
has been sequenced and, unfortunately, we failed to amplify any cyt
b
fragment from a tissue of a specimen identified as
C. portali
(BMNH ZD 1971.817). We thus tentatively ascribe the sequence we obtained to
C. ramona
, pending a taxonomic revision.