Planigale kendricki Aplin, Cooper, Travouillon & Umbrello, 2023

Umbrello, Linette S., Cooper, Norah K., Adams, Mark, Travouillon, Kenny J., Baker, Andrew M., Westerman, Mike & Aplin, Ken P., 2023, Hiding in plain sight: two new species of diminutive marsupial (Dasyuridae: Planigale) from the Pilbara, Australia, Zootaxa 5330 (1), pp. 1-46 : 24-25

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5330.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:08AA1FEB-6C3E-4C17-AB38-038E7B87E9F4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8248881

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DCFFF2D7-37E8-4DB1-BE82-E4DC10ADCF2D

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:DCFFF2D7-37E8-4DB1-BE82-E4DC10ADCF2D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Planigale kendricki Aplin, Cooper, Travouillon & Umbrello
status

sp. nov.

Planigale kendricki Aplin, Cooper, Travouillon & Umbrello sp. nov.

( Fig. 10–13 View FIGURE 10 View FIGURE 11 View FIGURE 12 View FIGURE 13 , Tables 2 View TABLE 2 , 4 View TABLE 4 )

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:DCFFF2D7-37E8-4DB1-BE82-E4DC10ADCF2D

Formerly referred to as ‘ Planigale 1’ by the following authors: Blacket et al. (2000) and Westerman et al. (2016), and Planigale sp. 1 by Gibson & McKenzie (2009) and Umbrello et al. (2020).

Holotype. WAM M41812 View Materials : subadult male with incompletely erupted P 3; Barlee Range Nature Reserve, Western Australia, 23°23’21” S, 115°53’12” E. Collected by P. Kendrick, 13 th June 1994. Spirit and skull. Liver tissue, ABTC61747 View Materials . Specimen located in the Western Australian Museum Mammal collection, Welshpool , Western Australia. GoogleMaps

Paratypes. WAM M15160 View Materials : adult male, Mt Bruce , Western Australia, 22°38’15” S, 118°08’00” E (note: this location is now the Marandoo mine site). Collected by J. Burt, 2 nd February 1976. Spirit and skull GoogleMaps . WAM M25773 View Materials , adult female, Karlamilyi National Park , Western Australia, 22°18’51” S, 122°03’19” E. Collected by R. Hart , 18 April 1986. Spirit and skull GoogleMaps . WAM M51581 View Materials : adult female, Mandora , Western Australia, 19°47’52” S, 121°26’52” E. Collected by P. Kendrick, 18 th October 1999. Spirit and skull. Liver tissue, ABTC97502 View Materials ; ABTC161754 View Materials GoogleMaps .

Etymology. Named in honour of Dr Peter Kendrick, in recognition of his major contribution to the understanding of the vertebrate fauna of north-western Australia.

Material examined. See Table 1 for a list of all Planigale kendricki specimens examined in this study, referred to as Planigale 1 in the table.

Diagnosis. Planigale kendricki ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ) is more rufous than all other members of the genus except perhaps some individuals of P. ingrami . It is substantially larger than each of P. ingrami , P. tenuirostris and P. sp. Mt Tom Price, and smaller than P. novaeguineae and P. gilesi . It is most similar in body size to some populations of P. maculata but differs from all populations of this taxon in its brighter dorsal and facial patterning. Craniodentally, it differs from all other Planigale species except P. tenuirostris in having more elongate nasals that invade deeply between the frontals. It further differs from typical P. maculata , and P. novaeguineae in having a more depressed cranium, a longer and narrower snout, and larger entoconids on M 1–3. It further differs from P. gilesi in having three upper premolars (reduced to two in P. gilesi ). It also differs from P. tenuirostris in having less reduced M 1–4 protocones and less reduced entoconids on M 1–3 (usually absent on M 1–2 in P. tenuirostris ).

WAM

Western Australian Museum

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Dasyuromorphia

Family

Dasyuridae

Genus

Planigale

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