Order Rodentia - Family Cricetidae
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
955
1189
book chapter
0-8018-8221-4
10.5281/zenodo.7316535
Microtus (Microtus) tatricus
Kratochvíl 1952
Microtus (Microtus) tatricus
Kratochvíl 1952
,
Acta Acad. Sci. Nat. Moravo-Siles., 24: 155-194
.
Type Locality:
Czech Republic
, Poprad Dist., Velka Studena Dolina valley, High Tatra Mtns.
Vernacular Names:
Tatra Vole
.
Synonyms:
Microtus (Microtus) zykovi
Zagorodnyuk 1989
.
Distribution:
W and E Carpathian Mtns,
800-2350 m
; isolated populations in montane spruce forests and meadows of Tatra Mtns between
Czech Republic
,
Slovakia
(Mošanský, 1994) and S
Poland
, Pilsko Mtn, and Beslksid Ziwiecki Mtns; also W
Ukraine
and N
Romania
(
Zagorodnyuk, 1988
;
Zagorodnyuk and Zima, 1992
); possibly also in the S Carpathians,
Romania
(
Zagorodnyuk and Zima, 1992
).
Conservation:
IUCN
– Lower Risk (nt).
Discussion:
Subgenus
Microtus
. Formerly placed in subgenus
Terricola
,
subterraneus
species group (Chaline et al., 1988;
Pavlinov and Rossolimo, 1998
;
Pavlinov et al., 1995
a
). A distinctive species reviewed by
Niethammer (1982
l
)
and
Zagorodnyuk and Zima (1992)
; karyotype with 2n = 32, lower than any species of
Terricola
(
Zima and Kral, 1984
a
).
Zagorodnyuk (1989)
systematically reviewed species in the subgenus
Terricola
and described
zykovi
, now recognized as the subspecies occurring in the E Carpathians (
Mitchell-Jones et al., 1999
). Presence in those mountains originally based on morphology until
Zagorodnyuk and Zima (1992)
added chromosomal evidence to conclusively identify
M. tatricus
. Zagorodnyuk et al. (1992) also documented
M. tatricus
and
M. subterraneus
in the E Carpathian Mtns in the
Ukraine
, corrected misidentifications as
M. agrestis
or
M. arvalis
, and described diagnostic morphological traits.
Zagorodnyuk and Zima (1992)
proposed that the pitymyan rhombus in
M. tatricus
, a cardinal dental trait for assigning it to the subgenus
Terricola
, was acquired independently and considered the species to be related to those in subgenus
Microtus
.
Haring et al. (2000:237)
corroborated such a relationship, using DNA sequence analyses that disclosed
M. tatricus
"as a distinct lineage that split off prior to the radiation of the
multiplex
complex, perhaps shortly after the separation of the
M. subterraneus
lineage."
Zagorodnyuk and Zima (1992)
propounded a biogeographic scenario to explain the Pleistocene differentiation of
M. tatricus
and its isolation in the Carpathians. Martínková and Dudich (2003) consolidated all distribution records and discussed the strong insularity of the species’ distribution
.