Peromyscus mexicanus Saussure 1860
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7316535 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11357101 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/09593629-1638-0EE5-5E88-C9AAF0A0EF15 |
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Guido |
scientific name |
Peromyscus mexicanus Saussure 1860 |
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Peromyscus mexicanus Saussure 1860 View in CoL
Peromyscus mexicanus Saussure 1860 View in CoL , Rev. Mag. Zool. Paris, ser. 2, 12: 103.
Type Locality: México, Veracruz, 10 km E Mirador (as restricted by Dalquest, 1950:8).
Vernacular Names: Mexican Deermouse.
Synonyms: Peromyscus altilaneus Osgood 1904 ; Peromyscus angelensis Osgood 1904 ; Peromyscus azulensis Goodwin 1956 ; Peromyscus cacabatus Bangs 1902 ; Peromyscus coatlanensis Goodwin 1956 ; Peromyscus hesperus Harris 1940 ; Peromyscus nicaraguae J. A. Allen 1908 ; Peromyscus nudipes (J. A. Allen 1891) ; Peromyscus orientalis Goodwin 1938 ; Peromyscus orizabae Merriam 1898 ; Peromyscus philombrius Dickey 1928 ; Peromyscus putlaensis Goodwin 1964 ; Peromyscus salvadorensis Dickey 1928 ; Peromyscus sloeops Goodwin 1955 ; Peromyscus teapensis Osgood 1904 ; Peromyscus tehuantepecus Merriam 1898 ; Peromyscus totontepecus Merriam 1898 ; Peromyscus tropicalis Goodwin 1932 .
Distribution: In México, along the Atlantic coast from S San Luis Potosí to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, and along the Pacific coast, from the Guerrero-Oaxaca border to C Chiapas; upper foothills and middle-elevation mountains in Guatemala, through El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua, to highlands in Costa Rica and W Panamá (Chiriquí region).
Conservation: IUCN – Lower Risk (lc).
Discussion: P. mexicanus species group. Geographic range, variation, and taxonomic synonymy summarized by Huckaby (1980), the species construct followed here. Includes forms formerly viewed as members of Osgoodomys banderanus ( angelensis , coatlanensis , and sloeops —see Musser, 1969), P. guatemalensis ( tropicalis —see Musser, 1969), and P. megalops ( azulensis —see Huckaby, 1980); and see account of P. gymnotis , which had been arranged as a race of P. mexicanus . Euchromatic banding patterns identical in P. mexicanus and related species so far examined ( Smith et al., 1986), and levels of genic divergence are similarly unremarkable ( Rogers and Engstrom, 1992).
The conspecific status of populations now arranged under P. mexicanus direly needs corroboration. For one, the status of altilaneus , described by Osgood (1904) from Todos Santos, Guatemala, also the type locality of P. guatemalensis , remains problematic. The taxon was synonymized under guatemalensis by Huckaby (1980; also see Carleton and Huckaby, 1975) but listed as a species by Hall (1981), who followed Osgood (1909) and Hooper (1968). Carleton (1989) noted the cranial resemblance of altilaneus to P. mexicanus , and while a high-elevation occurrence for the latter, the type locality of altilaneus does fall within the elevational range as known for P. mexicanus sensu lato ( Huckaby, 1980). Critical testing of this provisional synonymy is required. For another, southern populations identified as nudipes have been arranged as a synonym by some (Carleton, 1989; Huckaby, 1980) or considered a distinct species by others (Hooper, 1968; Osgood, 1909), including recent studies ( Rogers and Engstrom, 1992; Smith et al., 1986). Based on specimens from a single locality, the latter studies leave unanswered the status of other regional epithets ( cacabatus Bangs , hesperus Harris , and orientalis Goodwin ), the distributional extent of nudipes , assuming that this is the applicable name, and whether P. mexicanus proper occurs within the same region. While we expect that a separate mexicanus like species will be shown to inhabit these Mesoamerican southern highlands, its documentation will require denser geographic and altitudinal sampling and more critical analyses than so far mustered. For a third, the status of angelensis , found along the lower and dry Pacific-facing slopes in Oaxaca, deserves investigation; reassigned from banderanus to mexicanus (Musser, 1969) , these populations contrast in pelage color and cranial form with those inhabiting higher elevations in Oaxaca, notably totontepecus (see discussion in Carleton, 1989:89). Lastly, see remarks above under P. gymnotis on the need to clarify distributions and species-group synonyms of populations occurring in the lowlands of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec .
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Peromyscus mexicanus Saussure 1860
Wilson, Don E. & Reeder, DeeAnn 2005 |
Peromyscus mexicanus
Saussure 1860: 103 |