Crocidura denti, Dollman, 1915
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6870843 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6870403 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3D474A54-A0A8-87C4-FF04-A1761AFAFC93 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Crocidura denti |
status |
|
Dent's White-toothed Shrew
French: Crocidure de Dent / German: Dent-WeiRRzahnspitzmaus / Spanish: Musarana de Dent
Other common names: Dent's Shrew
Taxonomy. Crocidura jacksoni denti Dollman, 1915 View in CoL ,
between Mawambi and Avakubi , Ituri Forest , DR Congo.
Crocidura denti seems to be very close or even polyphyletic with C. hildegardeae based on 16s rRNA sequences, but additional sampling is needed. West African specimens need to be investigated to determine if they are C. denti . Monotypic.
Distribution. SE Nigeria, Cameroon, S Central African Republic, N Gabon, N Republic of the Congo, N DR Congo, and WC Uganda as well as a disjunctset of records from Guinea and Sierra Leone. View Figure
Descriptive notes. Head—body 63 mm, tail 46 mm, ear 8 mm, hindfoot 13 mm; weight 8-12 g (one specimen). Dent's White-toothed Shrew is small. Dorsal pelage is dark brown, and venter is slate-gray. Tail is ¢.65-70% of head-body length, hairy, and bicolored, being brown above and paler below. Skull is stout, with short broad rostrum. There are three unicuspids.
Habitat. Swamp forests (Guinea), gallery forests in montane savannas (Adamawa Plateau from Nigeria and Cameroon border), and secondary forests (Masako Forest Reserve, DR Congo at elevations of 500-1500 m.
Food and Feeding. Dent’s White-toothed Shrew eats large amounts of termites (30% of stomach contents) and millipedes (136%), ants (11:4%), beetles (9:6%), spiders (8:5%), cockroaches (6%), true bugs (5-5%), lepidopterans (5-5%), fly larvae (43%), and grasshoppers (less than 1%) in Masako Forest, DR Congo.
Breeding. No information.
Activity patterns. No information.
Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information.
Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. Dent’s White-toothed Shrew has a wide distribution, faces no major threats, and is very common throughout much ofits distribution.
Bibliography. Dudu et al. (2005), Grubb et al. (1998), Heim de Balsac (1959), Hutterer (2016e), Hutterer & Joger (1982), Quérouil et al. (2005), Ray & Hutterer (2013b), Ziegler et al. (2002).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.