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
Acomys (Acomys) cahirinus
(E. Geoffroy 1803)
[Acomys (Acomys)] cahirinus
(E.
Geoffroy 1803
)
,
Cat. Mamm.
Mus
. Natl. Hist. Nat., Paris: 195
.
Type Locality:
Egypt
,
Cairo
.
Vernacular Names:
Northeast
African Spiny Mouse
.
Synonyms:
Acomys (Acomys) albigena
(Heuglin 1877)
;
Acomys (Acomys) helmyi
Osborn 1980
;
Acomys (Acomys) hunteri
De Winton 1901
;
Acomys (Acomys) megalodus
Setzer 1959
;
Acomys (Acomys) nubicus
(Heuglin 1877)
;
Acomys (Acomys) sabryi
Kershaw 1922
;
Acomys (Acomys) viator
Thomas 1902
.
Distribution:
NE Africa:
Libya
,
Egypt
(
Osborn and Helmy, 1980
),
Sinai Peninsula
(
Saleh and Basuony, 1998
), N
Sudan
,
Ethiopia
(identified by chromosomal traits; Sokolov et al., 1992, 1993), and
Djibouti
(
Pearch et al., 2001
); see Bates (1994); W and S distributional limits unresolved.
Conservation:
IUCN
– Lower Risk (lc).
Discussion:
Subgenus
Acomys
.
Musser and Carleton (1993)
presented a broad definition of
A. cahirinus
that included some of the species listed here (
airensis
,
chudeaui
,
dimidiatus
and its synonyms,
johannis
and
seurati
) and had a geographic range extending from NW Africa to S
Pakistan
(as mapped by Bates, 1994, who followed
Musser and Carleton, 1993
). A growing body of published research, mostly by French scientists, has rendered Musser and Carleton’s view simplistic and an underestimate of the actual number of species. As currently understood, the geographic distribution of
A. cahirinus
centers in NE Africa, and the species is distinguished from
A. airensis
,
A. chudeaui
,
A. dimidiatus
,
A. johannis
, and
A. seurati
by dental characters (
Denys et al., 1994
), chromosomal traits (
Volobouev et al., 1991
, 1996, 2002
b
; 2n = 36 for
A. cahirinus
, 2n from 38 to 68 for the other species), and mtDNA cytochrome
b
sequences (
Barome et al., 2000
,
2001
a
,
b
); see accounts of those species.
Morphological and geographic definition of
A. cahirinus
remains incomplete; some of the taxa listed here as synonyms may belong to other species.
El Ashmawy (1990)
, for example, documented different G- and C-banding patterns in
cahirinus
and
hunteri
from
Egypt
.
Osborn and Helmy (1980)
, however, noted the ample evidence of intergradation between
hunteri
(described from NE
Sudan
) and
cahirinus
but no indication that
hunteri
intergrades with the more southern
cineraceus
. We provisionally include
viator
(type locality
NC
Libya
) in the synonymy of
A. cahirinus
, but
Osborn and Helmy (1980)
recorded smaller measurements for that form in
Egypt
(occurs only in extreme SW corner of the country) compared with all the other samples of
A. cahirinus
, and
Denys et al. (1994)
described the molar morphology of
viator
as distinct from that of
A. cahirinus
.
Ranck (1968)
provided detailed descriptions of pelage and habitat for samples from
Libya
that he assigned to
viator
. Whether the latter represents the easternmost segment of
A. cahirinus
, is a separate species, or a population of some other
Acomys
(the Algerian
seurati
, for example) will have to be determined by cytogenetic, molecular, and additional morphological inquiries.
Setzer (1959:95)
claimed melanistic
A. cahirinus
to be "almost exclusively commensal" or, if not actually caught in houses, collected in cultivated fields adjacent to villages.
Osborn and Helmy (1980:298)
noted that melanism is common in the Egyptian population "because it is the commonest mouse in buildings and houses. Some have been taken in gardens, date groves, and rocky hills and cliffs bordering the Nile Delta and Valley." The rat is also numerous in tombs and temples where the melanism becomes diluted
.