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We report on a new population of gorillas discovered in November 2002 in the Ebo Forest, Littoral Province, Cameroon. We observed A group of q7 gorillas directly for 83 min, and they were in auditory range for 155 min. Further evidence of gorilla presence included 8 nest groups totaling 38 nests, distinctive feeding signs accompanied by footprints, and a gorilla cranium collected from the nearby village of Iboti. This newly discovered gorilla population is geographically intermediate between the 2 extant populations of western gorillas: Gorilla gorilla gorilla, the most populous gorilla subspecies living in Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Congo-Brazzaville, Central African Republic and Cameroon to the south of the Sanaga River, and G. g. diehli or the Cross River gorilla, a small population of ca. 250 individuals on the Cameroon-Nigeria border. It is not possible to assign the new gorilla population to either subspecies on the basis of measurements of the single male cranium. Genetic analyses of freshly shed hairs, collected from gorilla nests, may help to resolve the taxonomic status of the Ebo gorillas. 相似文献
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Alain D. Missoup Violaine Nicolas Wim Wendelen Ernest Keming Charles F. Bilong Bilong Arnaud Couloux Ekobo Atanga Rainer Hutterer Christiane Denys 《Zoologica scripta》2012,41(4):327-345
Missoup, A.D., Nicolas, V., Wendelen, W., Keming, E., Bilong Bilong, C.F., Couloux, A., Atanga, E., Hutterer, R. & Denys, C. (2012). Systematics and diversification of Praomys species (Rodentia: Muridae) endemic to the Cameroon Volcanic Line (West Central Africa). —Zoologica Scripta, 41, 327–345. Our integrative approach combines two mitochondrial genes (16S and cyt b gene), two nuclear genes (exon 10 GHR and exon 1 IRBP) and craniometrical data to test the status and to infer phylogenetic relationships of the three Praomys Cameroon Volcanic Line endemics (P. hartwigi, P. morio and P. obscurus). The taxonomic rank of the principal genus group is assessed and the mode of diversification of species of the P. tullbergi complex in Afrotropical forests is discussed based on estimates of times to the most recent common ancestors and on tree topologies. This study documents for the first time the molecular and morphometrical distinctiveness of P. hartwigi and P. morio within the P. tullbergi species complex. Further studies including specimens of P. hartwigi from all its distribution range are needed to conclude on the status of P. obscurus. The monophyly of the genus Praomys is refuted. Times to the most recent common ancestors of major clades within the P. tullbergi species complex are estimated for the last 2.5 Mya and during the last 1 or 2 Mya for different species or forms. The lowland forest refuge hypothesis might well explain the diversification of P. misonnei, P. rostratus and P. tullbergi in the guineo‐congolese forest block. The isolation of montane forests could have facilitated the divergence between the two montane forest forms P. hartwigi and P. obscurus and between populations of P. morio from the continent and those from the island of Bioko. Praomys populations (species) that inhabit the Cameroon Volcanic Line Praomys probably originated as lowland forms subsequently specialized to highland conditions. 相似文献
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Jessica Junker Stephen Blake Christophe Boesch Geneviève Campbell Louwrens du Toit Chris Duvall Atanga Ekobo Gilles Etoga Anh Galat‐Luong Joel Gamys Jessica Ganas‐Swaray Sylvain Gatti Andrea Ghiurghi Nicolas Granier John Hart Josephine Head Ilka Herbinger Thurston Cleveland Hicks Bas Huijbregts Inaoyom S. Imong Noëlle Kuempel Sally Lahm Jeremy Lindsell Fiona Maisels Matthew McLennan Laura Martinez Bethan Morgan David Morgan Felix Mulindahabi Roger Mundry Kouamé Paul N'Goran Emmanuelle Normand Anne Ntongho David Tiku Okon Charles‐Albert Petre Andrew Plumptre Hugo Rainey Sébastien Regnaut Crickette Sanz Emma Stokes Adama Tondossama Sandra Tranquilli Jacqueline Sunderland‐Groves Peter Walsh Elizabeth A. Williamson Hjalmar S. Kuehl 《Diversity & distributions》2012,18(11):1077-1091
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