Crocidura quasielongata, Esselstyn & Achmadi & Handika & Swanson & Giarla & Rowe, 2021

Esselstyn, Jacob A., Achmadi, Anang S., Handika, Heru, Swanson, Mark T., Giarla, Thomas C. & Rowe, Kevin C., 2021, Fourteen New, Endemic Species Of Shrew (Genus Crocidura) From Sulawesi Reveal A Spectacular Island Radiation, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2021 (454), pp. 1-109 : 35-41

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1206/0003-0090.454.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7982B923-4CDC-44ED-A598-8651009DC7CC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5793407

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/551F4F6E-2983-4C71-923A-047FB0E24B74

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:551F4F6E-2983-4C71-923A-047FB0E24B74

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Crocidura quasielongata
status

sp. nov.

Crocidura quasielongata , new species

LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:551F4F6E-2983-4C71-923A-047FB0E24B74

Crocidura View in CoL “pale elongata” Esselstyn et al., 2019: 1715. Informal name.

HOLOTYPE: MZB 43001 (= LSUMZ 36939 View Materials ), an adult male, collected on 15 March 2013 by J.L. Patton. The specimen was prepared as a study skin, cleaned skull and skeleton, and frozen tissues. External measurements from the holotype are 215 mm × 126 mm × 22 mm × 11 mm = 16 g. The voucher specimen and a tissue sample will be permanently curated at MZB, with another tissue sample retained at LSUMZ. TYPE LOCALITY: Indonesia, Sulawesi Tengah, Toli Toli, Mt. Dako ; 1.10998° N, 120.90339° E, 410 m.

120°E 122°E 124°E 126°E

1.5°N

C. elongata C. quasielongata C. microelongata

1.5°S

Recent sample sites 3°S Miller and Hollister (1921) type localities

100 km 4.5°S

0–1000 m 1000–2000 m 6°S> 2000 m

ETYMOLOGY: We combine “quasi” with “elongata” because this species resembles C. elongata .

GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION: Widespread on Sulawesi and recorded from all areas of endemism except the north-central and north-east ( fig. 16 View FIG ). Populations identified here are from the westcentral (Wasponda and Mts. Balease and Torompupu, Central Sulawesi Province; Salu Tiwo of Mt. Gandang Dewata, West Sulawesi Province; Mt. Latimojong, South Sulawesi Province), south-west (Mt. Bawakaraeng, South Sulawesi Province), south-east (Mt. Mekongga, Southeast Sulawesi Province), east-central (Mts. Katopasa and Tompotika, Central Sulawesi Province), and northwest (Mt. Dako, Central Sulawesi Province) areas of endemism ( fig. 16 View FIG ). We found this species from approximately 200 m at Salu Tiwo (low elevation Mt. Gandang Dewata site) to 1700 m on Mts. Mekongga and Katopasa and 1800 m on Mt. Bawakaraeng ( fig. 13 View FIG ; table 3 View TABLE 3 ).

DIAGNOSIS: A long-bodied, somewhat heavily built, moderately bicolored shrew with a long tail and long, pale hind feet ( table 2 View TABLE 2 ). The dorsal pelage ranges from gray-tan to gray-brown overall, with individual dorsal hairs having a gray base and tan to brown tip. Some specimens also have a narrow, tan band between the gray proximal section and brown tip of each hair. The ventral pelage has silver highlights, the visual effect of individual hairs each with a pale tip. In many specimens, the chest and throat area has a slight red tint due to variation in the color of the hair tips. The ears are large and pale. The mystacial vibrissae are dark proximally, but white distally, with the dark portion occupying 20%–80% of vibrissa length. The hind feet are long absolutely ( table 2 View TABLE 2 ) and relative to head-and-body length ( fig. 17 View FIG ). Dorsally, the feet range from entirely white, to brown at the ankle and wrist, slowly transitioning toward the white digits. Ventrally, the feet show the same transition (except in specimens where they are entirely white), but pigment is concentrated around the base of each foot pad. The claws are translucent ( fig. 14B View FIG ). The tail is subtly bicolored, with a brown dorsum and pale brown venter. Tiny applied hairs are present along the entire length of the tail, but they are barely visible to the naked eye along most of the tail. However, these hairs are slightly longer and white near the tip of the tail, creating a very small, sometimes white, distal tuft. Tail bristles are nearly absent ( fig. 14B View FIG ). The skull is long, primarily due to elongation of the postpalatal region, but not the rostral region ( figs. 10 View FIG , 18C View FIG ). Relative to skull length, the braincase is especially narrow (BB/CIL) and the interorbital region somewhat narrow (IOW/CIL; fig. 10 View FIG ) and relatively untapered. The lambdoidal crest is prominent. The dentition is robust ( fig. 18C View FIG ).

COMPARISONS: This species is easily distinguished by the ratio of tail length to head-andbody length (most specimens>110%; fig. 9 View FIG ) from all Crocidura species on Sulawesi except

other members of the Long-Tailed Group. Within this group, C. quasielongata is considerably larger, much stockier, has a much narrower relative braincase breadth (BB/CIL), and has a much less hairy tail than C. caudipilosa . Within the Elongata Subgroup, C. quasielongata is, on average, intermediate in size, tail length, and hind-foot length between the smaller C. microelongata and the slightly larger C. elongata ( fig. 9 View FIG ; tables 2 View TABLE 2 , 5 View TABLE 5 ). Crocidura quasielongata has long ears, second in length only to C. elongata ( table 2 View TABLE 2 ). Although these measurements overlap between the species, the averages differ. On the hind foot, the thenar pad is shorter than in C. elongata ( fig. 14 View FIG ), despite the similar hind-foot lengths shared by these species. Also, on average, C. quasielongata is paler than either C. elongata or C. microelongata , but there is substantial color variation across the range of the species. The pelage varies in overall color from tan to dark brown. The palest specimens of C. quasielongata are from Mt. Tompotika and Salu Tiwo of Mt. Gandang Dewata, while animals from Mt. Dako are slightly darker, and specimens from Mts. Balease, Katopasa, and Torompupu are darker still. These color differences may reflect a tendency for low-elevation animals to be paler than those sampled at higher elevations, perhaps an elevational version of Gloger’s Rule ( Gloger, 1833). The palest specimens have a middle color band that is light gray on individual hairs. The skull of C. quasielongata is long, with a very narrow braincase and interorbital region. The interorbital region is also rather straight, barely tapering anteriorly. In this regard, the skull is very similar to, but slightly shorter than that of C. elongata , and it is much more elongate than in C. microelongata ( fig. 12 View FIG ). In proportion to skull length, rostral length is greater, but postpalatal length is lesser in C. quasielongata than in C. elongata and C. microelongata ( fig. 10 View FIG ). The dentition is slightly more robust than in C. microelongata but comparable to that of C. elongata ( fig. 18 View FIG ).

COMMENTS: Although Crocidura microelongata is mostly separated in our PCA ( fig. 11 View FIG ) and

in univariate measures ( fig. 12 View FIG ), C. elongata and C. quasielongata are much more difficult to distinguish, with average differences apparent only from large series of specimens identified with molecular data. Based on current sampling, geography can be a reliable predictor except that we found both species occurring on Mt. Dako and there remains a large sampling gap between Mt. Dako and the west-central area of endemism (i.e., the base of the northern peninsula; fig. 16 View FIG ). On Mt. Dako, we trapped C. elongata around 512 and 1600 m, whereas we captured C. quasielongata only around 410 m. We found C. quasielongata at higher elevations in other parts of the island and C. elongata at lower elevations at other localities ( fig. 13 View FIG ; table 3 View TABLE 3 ). Thus, these two species may have a parapatric distribution partitioned by elevation on the one mountain where we found them together. Because these two species are so different morphologically from all the other species on the island, it would not be surprising if they fill similar functional niches and thus one excludes the other wherever they interact.

Despite the morphological similarities of Elongata Subgroup members, genetic evidence is clear that these three species are distinct from each other and do not form a clade. None of our phylogenetic analyses (mtDNA, nuclear exons, or UCEs) even hinted at a sister relationship between any of the three species. Our mitochondrial inferences placed Crocidura quasielongata as sister to C. caudicrassa ( figs. 4 View FIG , 5 View FIG ), but this seems unlikely because C. caudicrassa is sister to the phenotypically similar C. brevicauda in UCE trees ( figs. 7 View FIG , 8 View FIG ). In our UCE species tree, C. quasielongata is sister to a mix of Ordinary Group and Rhoditis Group species ( fig. 7 View FIG ). Despite these mixed signals, the lack of basal resolution among species in our phylogenetic estimates leaves the door open to possible sister relationships among Elongata Subgroup members. The similarities in cranial proportions (e.g., relative widths; fig. 10 View FIG ) between C. elongata and C. quasielongata suggest either inherited similarity, or remarkable convergence. If any of these three species ever show a sister relationship in future analyses, we suspect it will be this pair.

120°E 122°E 124°E 126°E

1.5°N

C. rhoditis C. pseudorhoditis C. australis C. pallida 1.5°S

Recent sample sites 3°S Miller and Hollister (1921) type localities

100 km 4.5°S

0–1000 m 1000–2000 m 6°S>2000 m

Our BPP analyses compared the three members of the Elongata Subgroup, even though we did not infer them to form a clade in any of our phylogenetic analyses. The samples of each species were chosen to represent the full extent of our geographic sampling for the range of each species. Samples included comprise Crocidura elongata from three mountains (N = 17), C. microelongata from four mountains (N = 24), and C. quasielongata from eight mountains (N = 28). The matrix is 92% complete and all analyses supported all three species with 1.0 posterior probability.

SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Mt. Balease ( FMNH 210542–210559 , 210596–210601 ), Mt. Bawakaraeng ( NMV Z57377 , Z57061 ), Mt. Dako ( MZB 43001 ; LSUMZ 36935–36938 ), Mt. Katopasa ( LSUMZ 39483 , 39486–39490 , 39492 ; NMV C40177 , C40201 , C40202 , Z62311 , Z61792 ), Mt. Latimojong ( MZB 40936 , MVZ 237573 ), Mt. Mekongga ( MWFB 8091 , 8094 , 8113 , 8114 , 8122 , 8130 , 13507 , 13509 , 13511 ), Salu Tiwo ( FMNH 218548–218557 , 218559–218561 , 218563– 218579 ; MZB 38448 , 38452 ), Mt. Tompotika ( FMNH 213339–213342 ), Mt. Torompupu ( LSUMZ 39418–39422 , 39426–39430 ; MVZ 238107 , 238108 , NMV C40240 , C40241 , C 40243–C40245 , C40247 , C40254 , C 40259– C40262 , C40281 , C40282 , C40288 , C40293 ), Wasponda ( FMNH 210560–210562 ).

MZB

Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense

LSUMZ

Louisiana State University, Musuem of Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Soricomorpha

Family

Soricidae

Genus

Crocidura

Loc

Crocidura quasielongata

Esselstyn, Jacob A., Achmadi, Anang S., Handika, Heru, Swanson, Mark T., Giarla, Thomas C. & Rowe, Kevin C. 2021
2021
Loc

Crocidura

Esselstyn, J. A. & A. S. Achmadi & H. Handika & T. C. Giarla & K. C. Rowe 2019: 1715
2019
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