Gliridae, Muirhead, 1819

Pfaff, Cathrin, Martin, Thomas & Ruf, Irina, 2015, BSeptal compass ^ and Bseptal formula ^: a new method for phylogenetic investigations of the middle ear region in the squirrel-related clade (Rodentia: Mammalia), Organisms Diversity & Evolution (New York, N. Y.) 15 (4), pp. 721-730 : 726

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s13127-015-0222-x

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D387F7-FFFB-FFDB-FCD9-7830FA08F99B

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Felipe

scientific name

Gliridae
status

 

Gliridae View in CoL

None of the investigated taxa of glirids possesses septa in the epitympanic recess ( Fig. 3 View Fig ; Table S2). The ancestral character state of the septa distribution for glirids are the primary ventrally lying septa I to III and the secondary septum a (>Re -/a,I, II,III pmd). The appearance of the posterior medial diverticulum (pmd) is coded as two character states (present, absent). The number of bony septa and the occurrence of a posterior medial diverticulum distinguish three groups of middle ear cavities within this group:

Group I: Glis glis is characterized by three ventrally positioned primary septa (>Re -/a,I,II,III; Fig. S2 B, C View Fig ).

Group II: The investigated specimens of Eliomys quercinus , Dryomys nitedula intermedius , and Graphiurus parvus (Table S2, Fig. S2 D, E View Fig ) show the same pattern as G. glis . Additionally, these species possess a posterior diverticulum, similar to the condition found in Muscardinus avellanarius .

Group III: The middle ear cavity of M. avellanarius houses four primary septa in the tympanic cavity and has an additional posterior diverticulum (>Re -/a,I,II,III,IV pmd; Fig. S3 A, B View Fig ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Rodentia

Family

Gliridae

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