A new genus and species of long-clawed mouse (Rodentia: Muridae) from temperate rainforests of Chile |
| |
Authors: | BRUCE D. PATTERSON F.L.S. |
| |
Affiliation: | Division of Mammals, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL 60605, U.S.A. |
| |
Abstract: | Morphological comparisons of long-clawed mice in southern South America reveal the existence of four genera, only three of which are named. The fourth genus is described and compared with Geoxus, Chelemys and Notiomys. External, cranial and dental characters indicate that the new mouse is most closely related to Geoxus , the raton topo or mole mouse. Geoxus and the new form may be distinguished using both qualitative and quantitative characters. The incipient specializations of the new mouse for fossorial life suggest that it represents an early offshoot along the line leading to the more highly specialized Geoxus. Discovery of a new mammalian genus in Chile, where naturalists have been active for more than two centuries, indicates the importance of continued biological surveys, even in ostensibly well-studied regions. The new mouse reinforces the strong differentiation of faunas inhabiting southern beech ( Nothofagus ) forests in South America, where generic endemism of rodents and marsupials reaches 67%. |
| |
Keywords: | Akodontine rodents morphology South America systematics Valdivian forest Nothofagus fossorial |
|
|