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
Grammomys cometes
(Thomas and Wroughton, 1908)
.
Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1908:549
.
TYPE LOCALITY:
Mozambique
,
Inhambane
.
DISTRIBUTION: From Pirie Forest (northwest of King William's Town) in SE
Cape Prov.
of
South Africa
north through Natal and Transvaal into E
Zimbabwe
(Melsetter and Umtali districts) and
Mozambique
south of the Zambezi River (see
Meester et al., 1986
; Smither and Tello, 1976;
Skinner and Smithers, 1990
).
SYNONYMS:
silindensis
.
COMMENTS: The geographic range of G.
cometes
has been outlined as extending north from
South Africa
through East Africa to S
Sudan
(
Hutterer and Dieterlen, 1984
) but pending revisionary study of the genus we restrict it to the eastern segment of the Southern African Subregion south of Zambezi River (similar to the rang mapped by
Skinner and Smithers, 1990:225
), and consider samples north of that river to be G.
ibeanus
(see that account). We studied the
holotype
of
cometes
and the other specimens in the type series noted by
Thomas and Wroughton (1908)
; these animals are on average larger and have more highly inflated bullae than do those from north of the Zambesi River.
Ansell (1978)
and
Ansell and Dowsett (1988)
assigned samples from
Zambia
and
Malawi
to
cometes
,
but were also impressed with the chromatic and morphological contrast between them and the
holotype
from Inhambane. The specimen from the Pirie Forest (in the American Museum of Natural History) represents a range extension south of Natal.