Order Rodentia - Family Muridae
Author
Wilson, Don E.
Author
Reeder, DeeAnn
text
2005
The Johns Hopkins University Press
Baltimore
Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3 rd Edition), Volume 2
1189
1531
book chapter
0-8018-8221-4
10.5281/zenodo.7316535
Apodemus argenteus
Temminck 1844
Apodemus argenteus
Temminck 1844
,
in: Siebold, Temminck, and Schlegel, Fauna Japonica, Arnz et Socii, Lugduni Batavorum: 51
.
Type Locality:
Japan
.
Vernacular Names:
Small Japanese Field Mouse
.
Synonyms:
Apodemus celatus
Thomas 1906
;
Apodemus geisha
(Thomas 1905)
;
Apodemus hokkaidi
(Thomas 1906)
;
Apodemus sagax
Thomas 1908
;
Apodemus tanei
Kuroda 1924
;
Apodemus yakui
(Thomas 1906)
.
Distribution:
Endemic to
Japan
(
Dobson, 1994
); the four main islands (
Hokkaido
, Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu) along with some smaller ones (
Abe and Ishii, 1987
;
Corbet, 1978
c
:136
;
Kaneko, 1994
).
Conservation:
IUCN
– Lower Risk (lc).
Discussion:
argenteus
group.
Zimmermann (1962)
included
A. argenteus
in the subgenus
Alsomys
, but this allocation was questioned by
Corbet (1978
c
:136)
. Based on external, cranial, dental, and chromosomal features,
Musser et al. (1996:184)
could not place
A. argenteus
in any existing subgenus of
Apodemus
and wrote that the species "needs to be compared with other species in the genus within a revisionary study that focuses on phylogenetic analyses of morphological and biochemical characters before we can identify its nearest phyletic affinity." Comparison of genomes among several species of
Apodemus
, as assessed by differentiation of ribosomal DNA restriction sites (
Suzuki et al., 1990
), restriction-fragment-length polymorphism (
RFLP
) of nuclear DNA (Chelomina, 1998;
Chelomina et al., 1995
), mtDNA cytochrome
b
sequences (
Chelomina et al., 1998
b
;
Liu et al., 2004
) and phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial cytochrome
b
and nuclear
IRBP
gene sequences (
Serizawa et al., 2000
;
Suzuki et al., 2003
), indicates that
A. argenteus
differs from all other European and Asian species analyzed, and represents an ancient independent lineage, one of the three initial evolutionary radiations leading to the modern Asian
Apodemus
fauna (
Liu et al., 2004
;
Serizawa et al., 2000
;
Suzuki et al., 2003
). Its small body size, arboreal adaptations, and distinctive morphology compared with all the other species of
Apodemus
were also recognized by
Thomas (1905
b
)
, who described
A. argenteus
under the name
Micromys geisha
, and proposed
hokkaidi
,
yakui
, and
celatus
as subspecies of
M. geisha
(see synonymy in
Ellerman and Morrison-Scott, 1951:570
).
Ellerman (1941:96)
also recognized a "
geisha
group."
Kawamura (1989:85
; also see
Kawamura, 1991
) studied molars and cranial fragments of
A. argenteus
from middle and late Pleistocene sediments as well as Holocene and Recent material, and suggested that the "species is relatively primitive in dental morphology and possibly near to ancestral forms of the genus
Apodemus
."
Other studies pertinent to systematics of
A. argenteus
are: electrophoretic analyses of 17 enzymes reported in context of biochemical systematics of Japanese
Apodemus
(
Saitoh et al., 1989
)
, chromosomal and morphometric comparisons between
A. argenteus
and other Japanese
Apodemus
(
Vorontsov et al., 1977
a
)
, polymorphic microsatellite DNA markers identified in
A. argenteus
that can be used to investigate genetic variation within the species (
Ohnishi et al., 1998
), study of nonrandom distribution of sister chromatid exchanges (
Satoh and Obara, 1995
), topographic distribution (
Kaneko, 1992
a
), variation in molar size among samples from the Japanese Oki Isls (
Sakai et al., 1997
), comparisons with
A. sylvaticus
and
A. speciosus
in adaptive latitudinal trends in mandible shape (
Renaud and Michaux, 2003
), inter- and intraspecific patterns of morphological variation in sympatric
A. argenteus
and
A. speciosus
and its importance in insular isolation and biogeographic gradients (
Renaud and Millien, 2001
), and significance of lower incisor size and shape in ecological and taxonomic inquiries (
Millien-Parra, 2000
a
). Reviewed by
Musser et al. (1996)
and
Kaneko (1994)
. Because the type series of
Mus argenteus
Temminck, 1844
is composite, a
lectotype
was chosen by
Smeenk et al. (1982)
, which stabilizes the name; year of publication of
argenteus
is usually listed as 1845 but the description appeared in 1844; see
Holthuis and Sakai (1970)
.