Xerina Murray
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1515/mammalia-2015-0073 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EE87BA-FFEB-5B07-FF5A-FA0DFB89FE31 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Xerina Murray |
status |
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Subtribe Xerina Murray : African bristly ground squirrels
For synonyms see under Xerinae .
Subtribe Xerina includes African members of the tribe Xerini , with long tail and a pelage which is bristly (rough in Atlantoxerus ) at all seasons; a bold light (whitish) ring is surrounding the eye, and three genera of totally four have flank stripes ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ). Soles and plants are nude ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 ); the pollex bears a tiny nail, claws on the remaining digits are not enlarged (<10 mm in length); two tufts of supraorbital vibrissae are present; the cerebral dura mater has no melanocits; the external meatus acusticus lacks a bony tube (except in Geosciurus ); buccinator and masticatory foramina are separate ( Figure 7 View Figure 7 ).
Few common names were in use in the past for Xerina : “spiny (or bristly) squirrels” ( Murray 1866, Flower and Lyddeker 189, Osborn 1910) and “African ground squirrels” ( Pocock 1922, Simpson 1945, Li et al. 2006). Pocock (1922) was perhaps the first who used the combination “bristly ground squirrels”.
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