Praomys taitae, (HELLER, 1912)

Carleton, Michael D. & Stanley, William T., 2012, Species limits within the Praomys delectorum group (Rodentia: Muridae: Murinae) of East Africa: a morphometric reassessment and biogeographical implications, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 165 (2), pp. 420-469 : 444-447

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2012.00817.x

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B18B5F-2B7D-D10A-FF4B-FACF66841967

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Praomys taitae
status

 

PRAOMYS TAITAE ( HELLER, 1912) View in CoL ( FIGS 6–9 View Figure 6 View Figure 7 View Figure 8 View Figure 9 ; TABLES 5, 6)

Epimys taitae Heller, 1912: 9 View in CoL ; type locality – ‘ Mt. Mbololo , Taita Mountains [Taita Hills], British East Africa [ Kenya], 5000 feet altitude’ [1524 m]; type specimen – USNM 181797 View Materials , an old adult male collected 5 November 1911 by E. Heller .

Rattus View in CoL [( Praomys View in CoL )] taitae, Hollister, 1919: 79 View in CoL (name combination).

Rattus (Praomys) delectorum, Allen & Loveridge, 1927: 435 (part, provisional identification of series from the Ululguru Mts, Tanzania).

Praomys taitae, G. M. Allen, 1939: 410 View in CoL (name combination).

Praomys jacksoni octomastis Hatt, 1940: 2 ; type locality – ‘ 6000 feet [1829 m] in the Old Mbulu Reserve [Kainam], Tanganyika Territory’ [ Tanzania] ; type specimen – AMNH 55718 View Materials , an adult female collected 28 November 1928 by A. L. Moses .

Rattus View in CoL [( Praomys View in CoL )] jacksoni View in CoL octomastis, Swynnerton & Hayman, 1951: 316 (name combination, retention as valid subspecies).

Praomys delectorum, Davis, 1965: 131 View in CoL (octomastis and taitae View in CoL allocated as synonyms without indication of rank).

Praomys jacksoni, Misonne, 1974: 27 View in CoL (octomastis and taitae View in CoL allocated as synonyms without indication of rank).

Praomys (Hylomyscus) denniae anselli, Bishop, 1979: 528 (part, misidentification of series from Ngorongoro, Tanzania).

Emended diagnosis: A species of the Praomys delectorum group characterized by small size ( Table 5), delicate molars (CLM ª 4.0–4.2 mm), and relatively heavy incisors; tops of hind feet whitish, lacking dusky swath across metatarsum.

Distribution: Chyulu Hills and Taita Hills of southern Kenya, through the Northern Highlands and Eastern Arc Mountains of northern and central Tanzania, as far south as the western Udzungwa Mts ( Fig. 10 View Figure 10 ); known elevation 230–2895 m, the majority of locality records falling between 1000 and 2000 m.

Morphological description and comparisons: Heller’s (1912: 9) characterization of the pelage of P. taitae was brief: ‘Dorsal area russet, darkest medially; sides lighter cinnamon, and sharply contrasted with light underparts; ears and tail broccoli-brown; feet white; underparts whitish, with a cream-buff suffusion; the hairs plumbeous basally’. His chromatic synopsis captures the reddish-brown colours and brighter tone that dominate the pelage in samples of P. taitae , especially compared with those of P. melanotus ( Figs 8A–C View Figure 8 , 9 View Figure 9 ). Some shade of reddish brown covers the crown, back, and rump, tending toward fuscous brown or umber over the middle dorsum and grading to cinnamon or fulvous brown on the cheeks and flanks. The junction of the dorsal–ventral pelage is sharply delineated, without any ochraceous lateral line. Relatively long terminal bands of white or cream partially obscure the lead-grey bases of the ventral hairs, imparting a medium grey to greyish white appearance to the underparts; patches of entirely white hairs occur over the throat and chest in some specimens. Series of P. taitae lack the strong overwash of pinkish-buff that commonly embellishes the underparts of P. delectorum ; compared with series of P. melanotus , the long white tips of ventral hairs give a brighter tone to the grey underparts of P. taitae ( Fig. 8A′ View Figure 8 –C′). Tops of hind feet of P. taitae are uniformly white to dirty white, from the ankles to the tips of toes, standing apart visually from the brown dorsal pelage; this trait usefully contasts with the pes of P. delectorum and P. melanotus , both of which commonly possess a swath of dusky hairs that extend over the tarsus onto the metatarsus ( Fig. 9 View Figure 9 ).

Overall small size is the defining quality of P. taitae among the three species of the P. delectorum group. Its diminuitive size and delicate proportions are attested by the univariate statistics for many variables ( Table 5) and by variable loading coefficients in the multivariate analyses ( Tables 3, 4). Size contrast, unrelated to age, is easily appreciated between samples of the smaller P. taitae and larger P. melanotus ( Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ), but discrimination is less evident between those of P. taitae and P. delectorum . Their cranial differentiation rests upon the narrower zygomatic plate, larger molars, and finely built incisors in P. delectorum compared with relatively broader zygomatic plate, dainty molars, and stout incisors in P. taitae ( Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ).

Remarks: Like Thomas’ (1910) description of Epimys delectorum, Heller (1912: 9) placed his new species, the ‘Taita Forest Mouse,’ within Epimys . Heller (1912: 9) contrasted taitae only with the geographically nearby form peromyscus ( Heller, 1909) – ‘much smaller in size, with shorter ears; skull differs decidedly in lacking beads to interorbital edges, which are rounded, and in the shorter palatal foramina, which reach only anterior edge of first molar’ – the latter currently treated as a synonym of Praomys jacksoni (e.g. Musser & Carleton, 2005). Such trenchant differences served to easily diagnose taitae as distinct from the very different P. jacksoni (peromyscus), but Heller’s description evidenced no awareness of Epimys delectorum Thomas (1910) , then recently described from southern Malawi. Later authors would associate taitae as a syononym of P. delectorum ( Davis, 1965; Musser & Carleton, 1993), and our morphometric evidence indicates its status as a species within the P. delectorum group.

Hatt (1940) considered his new subspecies octomastis to be a distinctive regional form of Praomys jacksoni . At the time (i.e. Allen, 1939), the construct of P. jacksoni was broadly defined to include populations and taxa that subsequent authors have segregated as P. delectorum . As reflected in his choice of the specific epithet octomastis, Hatt (1940: 2) emphasized the mammary formula (2 + 2 = 8) as the ‘only noteworthy point of divergence from surrounding subspecies’. Surrounding subspecies in this case were populations of P. jacksoni peromyscus , which Hatt recognized as possessing only three pairs of mammae (1 + 2 = 6). Hatt (1940: 2) was aware of the description of melanotus by Allen & Loveridge (1933) – octomastis differs from jacksoni melanotus in ‘its generally lighter colour, particularly marked on the under surface’ – but he curiously overlooked their mention (1933: 107) of a nursing female with ‘four pairs of nipples’. All three females of the five specimens forming the type series of octomastis, including the type itself (AMNH 55718), do exhibit eight prominent mammary glands, but we also have verified this count on numerous females within series of P. delectorum , P. melanotus , and P. taitae . The trait is appropriately considered a characteristic of the P. delectorum species group, a contrast that distinguishes it from most members of the P. jacksoni group ( Lecompte et al., 2002a; P. degraaffi also possesses eight teats – Van der Straeten & Kerbis Peterhans, 1999).

Nor did Hatt’s (1940) description of octomastis address Heller’s (1912) taitae , a geographically closer form and one whose morphology essentially resembles octomastis. The type specimen of octomastis (AMNH 55718) agrees closely with that of taitae (USNM 181797) in most craniodental measurements ( Table 6) and nests comfortably within the variation observed for P. taitae , as attested by the mathematical certainty of its a posteriori classification with taitae in DFA ( Fig. 4C View Figure 4 ). The two types exhibit the core qualitative traits of the P. delectorum group – interorbital morphology, supraotic fenestration, long incisive foramina, and pronounced t3 on M1; moreover, the type series of octomastis conforms to the subtle diagnostic traits of P. taitae , notably the wholly white metatarsum, intermediately sized zygomatic plate, smaller molars, and comparatively robust incisors.

As we alluded to above, Allen & Loveridge’s (1933) initial assignment of the Kigogo specimen (MCZ 26498), a juvenile from the Udzungwa Mts, EAM, to melanotus was a dubious allocation. Series from the Udzungwa Mts available to us (see Specimens examined) morphologically fit with other populations in the EAM, the senior name for which is Heller’s (1912) taitae . Although a juvenile, measurements of the unworn molars of MCZ 26498 (CLM = 4.17 mm, WM1 = 1.24 mm) fall at the lowest limits recorded for P. melanotus but within the midrange of values obtained for P. taitae ( Table 5). We regard this past record of melanotus from the EAM as an initial misidentification.

Bishop (1979) allocated specimens from Ngorongoro to the type series of his new subspecies Hylomyscus denniae anselli . Those that we have examined (BMNH 65.3612 –65.3617) prove to be examples of Praomys taitae as indicated by their size, long rostrum and relatively narrow braincase, broad zygomatic plate with deep notch, and well-defined t3 and t9 on the M1.

Although the taxa delectorum , melanotus , and octomastis eventually became associated as geographical representatives of a widely distributed P. jacksoni ( Allen, 1939; Swynnerton & Hayman, 1951; Misonne, 1974), the small Praomys named from the Taita Hills was regularly maintained as a species over this period ( Hollister, 1919; Allen, 1939; Allen & Loveridge, 1942; Swynnerton & Hayman, 1951). Within Tanzania, Swynnerton & Hayman (1951) assigned specimens from the Usambara and Uluguru Mts in the eastern EAM to Rattus taitae , which they maintained as distinct from R. jacksoni melanotus . With reallocation of the populations from the Udzungwa Mts to P. taitae , contra Allen & Loveridge (1933) and Swynnerton & Hayman (1951), the southern distributional occurrence of P. taitae is now well documented, approximately delimited by the Makambako Gap ( Fig. 10 View Figure 10 ). The northern extent of its range is less clear. While the species certainly occurs in the Northern Highlands of Tanzania, we have not found P. taitae in the Gregorian Rift mountains of central Kenya (Mau Escarpment, Aberdare Mts, Mt Kenya), at least in North American collections. Search of other natural history collections is recommended to clarify whether it inhabits those Kenyan highlands.

Natural history notes: Samples of Praomys taitae are generally found in submontane, montane, and upper montane habitats (sensu Lovett, 1993b), but have been documented as low as 230 m in the Kwamgumi Forest Reserve, in lowland forest at the base of the East Usambara Mountains ( Stanley et al., 2005b). The abundance of this species at this elevation (as measured by trap success) was low relative to sites in the same mountain range at higher elevations (Stanley & Goodman, 2011). The Udzungwa Scarp Forest Reserve, Udzungwa Mts, contains undisturbed forest that ranges from 300 to 2000 m, one of the last natural and continuous elevational gradients that can be sampled in the Eastern Arc Mountains. Praomys taitae (reported as P. delectorum ) was recorded from 600 to 2000 m, but in abundance greater than expected at 1460 m; none of the other elevations (600, 910 and 2000 m) yielded numbers of P. taitae greater than expected ( Stanley & Hutterer, 2007). Notably, P. taitae was not found during a survey of the same forest at 300 m of this escarpment a year earlier (W. T. Stanley, unpubl. data). The highest elevation where P. taitae has been documented is 2900 m in forested habitats on Mt Kilimanjaro. Significantly, this species was not observed above the tree line during a faunal survey of this mountain (W. T. Stanley, unpubl. data). Thus, P. taitae is restricted to forests, but ranges lower in elevation than Hylomyscus arcimontensis , with which it is commonly sympatric.

Praomys taitae View in CoL shares its habitat with several other rodent species. Based on intensive faunal surveys over the past two decades, three species have been recorded in every montane setting where P. taitae View in CoL has been recorded: Lophuromys aquilus View in CoL , Grammomys ibeanus View in CoL , and Graphiurus murinus View in CoL . Other species found with P. taitae View in CoL in the Eastern Arc Mountains are Beamys hindei View in CoL and Hylomyscus arcimontensis . The latter two rodents are unknown from the northern highland massifs. The calls for critical systematic evaluation of the various isolated populations of Grammomys ibeanus View in CoL and Graphiurus murinus View in CoL in East African mountains ( Holden, 2005; Musser & Carleton, 2005) advise caution about sympatry among various species until such revisionary studies are conducted.

Data collected over three dry season surveys in the Usambara Mountains indicate that populations of P. taitae View in CoL have limited reproductive activity between July and September. Only 13.5% of females examined (N = 74) were pregnant and only one in 44 (2.3%) females assessed was lactating (Stanley & Goodman, 2011). Between 2004 and 2006, Makundi, Massawe & Mulungu (2006) found a significant density increase in P. taitae View in CoL (reported as P. delectorum ) in the Magamba Forest, West Usambara Mts, in March– June compared with September–December. The greatest number of scrotal testes and perforate vaginas were scored from the period April to June. Based on these data, little reproductive activity occurs during the dry period (July–August) and P. taitae View in CoL apparently breeds annually within a relatively short period. This conclusion is also borne out by data collected during surveys of other Eastern Arc and northern highland populations conducted every year since 1993. In 251 females examined during these collective surveys, only 31 (12.3%) were pregnant. A notable exception is the sample of nine specimens examined in 1996 in the Uluguru Mountains where five (55%) were pregnant. The number of embryos averaged 4.0 (N = 31, range 3–6), the embryos in a single uterine horn ranging from 1 to 6. The embryos averaged 10.5 mm in crown–rump length (range = 2–24 mm, N = 20).

Unlike the scansorial proclivities of Hylomyscus arcimontensis , individuals of Praomys taitae are typically captured in traps set on the ground or in other terrestrial settings, such as on rocks or on logs easily reachable from the ground. Arboreal traps set by Stanley and colleagues commonly caught examples of Hylomyscus arcimontensis , but not those of Praomys taitae . Kingdon (1974) stated that P. jacksoni is partially arboreal.

Specimens examined (365, as follows): KENYA: Nairobi area , Chyulu Hills, 6000 ft ( USNM 344947 View Materials ) ; Coast Region, Taita Hills, Mt Mbololo , Summit , 5000 ft ( FMNH 43458–43460 View Materials ; MCZ 32124, 32125 View Materials , 32131 View Materials ; USNM 181797 View Materials , 183411–183420 View Materials , 183422–183426 View Materials , 183429–183432 View Materials , 184508–184524 View Materials , 184525 View Materials ) ; Taita Hills, Mt Umengo , Summit ( USNM 183433–183441 View Materials ) ; Taita District, Taita Hills, Ngangao Forest , 4.25 km N and 1.75 km W Wundanyi, 1700 m ( CM 102635 View Materials –102643 , 102645–102647 , 102649–102652 ) .

TANZANIA: Arusha Region, Arumeru District, Arusha National Park, Mount Meru , 2300 m ( FMNH 208574–208580 View Materials , 208583–208585 View Materials , 208595–208597 View Materials , 208599 View Materials , 208601 View Materials , 208607 View Materials , 208611 View Materials , 208612 View Materials , 208615 View Materials , 208619 View Materials ) ; Ngorongoro North , 7500 ft ( BMNH 65.3612 – 65.3617) GoogleMaps ; Old Mbulu Reserve , 5500 ft ( AMNH 55702 View Materials ), 6000 ft ( AMNH 55715–55718 View Materials ) . Dodoma Region, Mpwapwa District, Rubeho Mts, Mwofwomero Forest Reserve , 1923 m ( FMNH 197908–197911 View Materials , 197916 View Materials , 197918 View Materials , 197919–197924 View Materials , 197926 View Materials , 197927 View Materials , 197929 View Materials , 197930 View Materials , 197934 View Materials ) ; Mpwapwa District, Rubeho Mts, Mwofwomero Forest , near Chugu Peak, 1900 m ( FMNH 197943 View Materials , 197945 View Materials , 197950–197952 View Materials , 197955 View Materials ) . Iringa Region, Iringa District, Udzungwa Mts, Ndundulu Forest , 9 km E Udekwa, 1900 m ( FMNH 177709 View Materials , 177711–177715 View Materials , 177717 View Materials , 177719 View Materials , 177720 View Materials ) . Kilimanjaro Region, Moshi District, Mt Kilimanjaro, Kilimanjaro National Park , 7 km N and 2.5 km W Maua, 8100 ft ( FMNH 173881 View Materials , 174269–174271 View Materials , 174273–174283 View Materials ) ; Moshi District, Mt Kilimanjaro, Kilimanjaro National Park , 10.5 km N and 3.5 km W Maua, 9500 ft ( FMNH 174285 View Materials , 174286 View Materials ) ; Moshi District, Mt Kilimanjaro, 4 km N and 1.5 km W Maua, 6700 ft ( FMNH 174287– 174294 View Materials , 174296 View Materials , 174297 View Materials , 174299–174309 View Materials ) ; Mwanga District, North Pare Mts, Kindoroko Forest Reserve , 1688 m ( FMNH 192692 View Materials , 192696 View Materials , 192697 View Materials , 192701 View Materials , 192704 View Materials , 192705 View Materials , 192709 View Materials , 192711 View Materials , 192719 View Materials , 192721 View Materials , 192722 View Materials , 192728 View Materials , 192730 View Materials , 192733 View Materials , 192734 View Materials ) ; Mwanga District, North Pare Mts, Minja Forest Reserve , 1572 m ( FMNH 192737 View Materials , 192738 View Materials , 192741 View Materials , 192743 View Materials , 192744 View Materials , 192748 View Materials , 192749 View Materials , 192750 View Materials , 192752 View Materials , 192755 View Materials , 192762–192764 View Materials , 192769 View Materials , 192773 View Materials ) ; Same District, South Pare Mts, Chome Forest Reserve , 7 km (by air) S Bombo, 1100 m ( FMNH 151311 View Materials , 151312 View Materials , 151320 View Materials , 151335 View Materials , 151336 View Materials , 151338 View Materials , 151339 View Materials , 151344 View Materials , 151348 View Materials , 151349 View Materials , 151351 View Materials , 151360 View Materials ) ; Same District ( FMNH 153972–153974 View Materials , 153976–153987 View Materials , 153993 View Materials , 153996 View Materials ) . Morogoro Region, Udzungwa Mts , Kigoro ( MCZ 26498) ; Kilombero District, Udzungwa Mts , 3.5 km W and 1.7 km N Chita, along Chita-Ihimbo trail, 910 m ( FMNH 155466 View Materials , 155467 View Materials , 155625 View Materials , 155627 View Materials , 155630 View Materials ) ; Kilombero District, Udzungwa Mts , 4.5 km W Chita, along Chita-Ihimbo trail, 600 m ( FMNH 155478 View Materials , 155653 View Materials ) ; Kilombero District, Udzungwa Mts , 19.5 km N and 0.5 km W Chita, 2000 m ( FMNH 155480 View Materials , 155654 View Materials , 155658–155660 View Materials ) ; Kilombero District, Udzungwa Mts , 4 km W and 5 km N Chita, along Chita-Ihimbo trail, 1460 m ( FMNH 155631 View Materials , 155637– 155647 View Materials , 155649 View Materials , 155651 View Materials , 155652 View Materials ) ; Kilosa District, Malundwe Mts, Mikumi National Forest , 985 m ( FMNH 187296–187301 View Materials , 187303–187311 View Materials , 187313– 187318 View Materials ) ; Kilosa District, Rubeho Mts, Ilole Forest , 1878 m ( FMNH 197956 View Materials , 197957 View Materials , 197960–197964 View Materials ) ; Kilosa District, Ukaguru Mts, Mamiwa-Kisara Forest, 1.5 km S Mt Munyera , 1840 m ( FMNH 166687 View Materials , 166688 View Materials , 166944 View Materials , 166946–166949 View Materials , 166951 View Materials , 166952 View Materials , 166954 View Materials , 166956 View Materials , 166957 View Materials , 166959 View Materials ) ; Kilosa District, Ukaguru Mts, Mamiwa-Kisara Forest, 1 km E and 0.75 km S Mt Munyera , 1900 m ( FMNH 166685 View Materials , 166960–166962 View Materials , 166965 View Materials , 166966 View Materials , 166968 View Materials ) ; Morogoro District, Nguru Mts, Manyangu Forest Reserve , 8 km N and 3 km W Mhonda, 1000 m ( FMNH 161281 View Materials , 161282 View Materials , 161284–161286 View Materials , 161289 View Materials , 161291 View Materials , 161294– 161297 View Materials ) ; Morogoro District, Nguru Mts, Nguru South Forest Reserve , 6 km N and 6 km W Mhonda, 1500 m ( FMNH 161301–161305 View Materials , 161307 View Materials , 161310 View Materials ) ; Morogoro District, Uluguru Mts, Uluguru North Forest , 3 km W and 1.3 km N Tegetero, 1345 m ( FMNH 158366 View Materials , 158368 View Materials , 158370 View Materials , 158371 View Materials , 158373–158375 View Materials ) ; Morogoro District, Uluguru Mts, Uluguru North Forest , 5.1 km W and 2.3 km N Tegetero, 1535 m ( FMNH 158379– 158381 View Materials , 158384–158386 View Materials , 158388 View Materials , 158563 View Materials , 158574 View Materials ) ; Uluguru Mts, Bagilo ( MCZ 22504, 22506 View Materials ) ; Uluguru Mts, Vituri ( MCZ 22509, 22512 View Materials , 22513 View Materials ) . Tanga Region, Hadeni District, Nguu Mts, Nguru North Forest Reserve , 5.6 km S and 3 km E Gombero, 1180 m ( FMNH 168350 View Materials , 168354 View Materials , 168355 View Materials , 168357 View Materials , 168358 View Materials , 168365 View Materials , 168366 View Materials , 168368 View Materials , 168370 View Materials , 168373 View Materials , 168374 View Materials , 168376 View Materials , 168377 View Materials , 168379 View Materials , 168383 View Materials , 168384 View Materials , 168386 View Materials , 163387 View Materials , 168393 View Materials , 168394 View Materials , 168396 View Materials , 168399– 168401 View Materials ) ; Hadeni District, Nguu Mts, Nguru North Forest Reserve, 3.6 km S and 4.7 km E Gombero , 1430 m ( FMNH 168402 View Materials , 168406 View Materials , 168408 View Materials , 168412 View Materials , 168413 View Materials , 168416 View Materials ) ; Korogwe Distrtict, West Usambara Mts, 12.5 km NW Korogwe, Ambangulu Tea Estate , 1300 m ( FMNH 147309 View Materials , 147311 View Materials , 147313 View Materials , 147317– 147320 View Materials , 147327 View Materials , 147332 View Materials , 150158 View Materials , 150280 View Materials , 150281 View Materials , 150283–150290 View Materials , 150352–150354 View Materials , 151272 View Materials , 151275 View Materials , 151513 View Materials , 151514 View Materials ) ; West Usambara Mts, 11 km NW Korogwe, Ambangulu Tea Estate , 1120 m ( FMNH 147335 View Materials ) ; West Usambara Mts, Sunga , 35 mi N Lushoto at Resthouse ( USNM 340787 View Materials ) ; Muheza District, East Usambara Mts, 6 km NW Amani, Monga Tea Estate , 1100 m ( FMNH 150217 View Materials , 150218 View Materials , 150221 View Materials , 150294 View Materials , 150297 View Materials , 150307 View Materials , 150311 View Materials ) ; Muheza District, East Usambara Mts, 4.5 km WNW Amani, Monga Tea Estate , control site, 1100 m ( FMNH 150236 View Materials , 150240 View Materials , 150245 View Materials , 150250 View Materials , 150319 View Materials , 150324 View Materials , 151280 View Materials , 151298 View Materials , 151300 View Materials ) ; Muheza District, East Usambara Mts, 8 km WNW Amani, Bulwa Tea Estate , 1000 m ( FMNH 150257 View Materials , 150332 View Materials , 150337 View Materials ) ; Muheza District, East Usambara Mts, 4.5 km ESE Amani, Monga Tea Estate , control site, 900 m ( FMNH 150262 View Materials , 150268 View Materials , 150274 View Materials , 150279 View Materials , 150339 View Materials , 150346 View Materials , 150349 View Materials , 151305– 151307 View Materials ) ; Muheza District, Kwamgumi Forest Reserve , 4.4 km W Mt Mhinduro, 2 km S Kwamtili Estate offices, 230 m ( FMNH 153998 View Materials ) ; Magrotto Mt , Magrotto Estate ( MCZ 39057) .

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Rodentia

Family

Muridae

Genus

Praomys

Loc

Praomys taitae

Carleton, Michael D. & Stanley, William T. 2012
2012
Loc

Praomys (Hylomyscus) denniae anselli

Bishop IR 1979: 528
1979
Loc

Praomys jacksoni, Misonne, 1974: 27

Misonne X 1974: 27
1974
Loc

Praomys delectorum, Davis, 1965: 131

Davis DHS 1965: 131
1965
Loc

Rattus

Swynnerton GH & Hayman RW 1951: 316
1951
Loc

Praomys jacksoni octomastis

Hatt RT 1940: 2
1940
Loc

Praomys taitae, G. M. Allen, 1939: 410

Allen GM 1939: 410
1939
Loc

Rattus (Praomys) delectorum

Allen GM & Loveridge A 1927: 435
1927
Loc

Rattus

Hollister N 1919: 79
1919
Loc

Epimys taitae

Heller E 1912: 9
1912
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