Xerini Murray
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1515/mammalia-2015-0073 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EE87BA-FFEA-5B07-FCE6-F992FDCCFA48 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Xerini Murray |
status |
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Tribe Xerini Murray View in CoL : Bristly ground squirrels
For synonyms see under Xerinae .
Ground squirrels with coarse, bristly or spiny fur during at least one season; hair is usually scanty; the feet is elongate and slender, the 3 rd digit longer than 4 th ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 ); the claws are long and comparatively straight (fossorial); pinna minute or reduced to a stiffened skin fold, antitragal thickening set near the middle of the posterior edge of pinnae; membranous cheek-pouches are missing. Xerini have supplementary superciliary vibrissae and the antebrachial vibrissae ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 ). The baculum consists of a compressed blade which carries a cartilaginous or partly ossified crest. Number of nipples is two to four pairs ( Figure 5 View Figure 5 ).
Skull ( Figure 7 View Figure 7 ) is typically with (i) the bony palate considerably prolonged beyond the ends of the tooth-row, (ii) enlarged lacrimal bone, (iii) well developed and anteriorly projected external ridge on the front face of the zygomatic plate, (iv) the squamosal bone extending up to the base of postorbital process of the frontal bone, (v) a powerful masseteric tubercle, (vi) a short and massive pterygoid processes, and (vii) the opisthodont upper incisors ( Flower and Lydekker 1891, Pocock 1922, Ellerman 1940, Ognev 1940, Moore 1959). The karyotype is conservative (2n=38).
Xerini View in CoL occupy dry open habitats in the Palaearctic region (central Asia and the area of the Atlas Mts.), and of sub-Saharan Africa (the Sudano-Guinean, Somali-Masai, and Zambezian savannas; Denys 1999). Genera occupy exclusive non-overlapping ranges, except for slight overlap between Xerus View in CoL and Euxerus in Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda and Kenya ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 ). Four genera of total five are monotypical what induced Moore (1959) to speculate that Xerini View in CoL are in the contracting phase of their evolution.
Xerini View in CoL , as typical ground squirrels, dig underground burrows and do not climb trees; Atlantoxerus View in CoL seeks shelter among rocks and easily climbs on rock slopes. Spermophilopsis View in CoL is a habitat specialist, mainly dependent on moving sands. All species are diurnal and do not practice torpor.
No common name is in use for the African and the Asiatic Xerini combined. We propose “bristly ground squirrels”, a name capturing an evident character in common to these animals.
The tribe contains two subtribes: Xerina of Africa and Spermophilopsina of Central Asia.
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