Dasymys Peters, 1875

Denys, Christiane, Missoup, Alain Didier, Nicolas, Violaine, Fülling, Olaf, Delapré, Arnaud, Bilong, Charles Felix Bilong, Taylor, Peter John J. & Hutterer, Rainer, 2014, African highlands as mammal diversity hotspots: new records of Lamottemys okuensis Petter, 1986 (Rodentia: Muridae) and other endemic rodents from Mt Oku, Cameroon, Zoosystema 36 (3), pp. 647-690 : 666

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/z2014n3a6

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6502AA63-E057-FFB7-1A02-FF16FCF24937

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Dasymys Peters, 1875
status

 

Genus Dasymys Peters, 1875 View in CoL

Different revisions have attempted to clarify the taxonomic situation in Dasymys from west-central Africa ( Carleton & Martinez 1991; Verheyen et al. 2003; Mullin et al. 2004). Nine species are actually recognized for the genus by Musser & Carleton (2005). In West Africa, D. foxi Thomas, 1912 is restricted to Jos Plateau ( Nigeria) and D. rufulus Miller, 1900 is widely distributed from Senegal to Nigeria. D. incomtus (Sundevall, 1847) is reported from central South Africa. Among the recognized subspecies of D. incomtus , D. incomtus bentleyae Thomas, 1892 was reported from Ngombi in the Lower Congo. It was considered a valid species by Verheyen et al. (2003). Eisentraut (1963) described D. incomtus longipilosus Eisentraut, 1963 from Mt Cameroon but this name is actually considered as a synonym of D. bentleyae ( Verheyen et al. 2003) . However, Musser & Carleton (2005) keep D. bentleyae and D. longipilosus as subspecies of D. incomtus . Cameroon rodents of the genus Dasymys are poorly known. Most of them are listed as D. incomtus . According to Mullin et al. (2004) this name should be restricted to Zimbabwe and South Africa while D. rufulus should have a larger range than previously suggested. Based on geometric morphometric analyses, these authors also suggested the specific validity of the Mt Cameroon endemic Dasymys species, D. longipilosus , pending further genetic analyses. In the present study, no species name was attributed to the nine specimens newly collected pending further revision of the genus Dasymys .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Rodentia

Family

Muridae

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