Microgale nasoloi, Jenkins & Goodman, 1999

Russell A. Mittermeier & Don E. Wilson, 2018, Tenrecidae, Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 8 Insectivores, Sloths and Colugos, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions, pp. 134-172 : 172

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6808230

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6686196

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9B333154-277C-8D78-FF0C-F706F7C2FB55

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Microgale nasoloi
status

 

30. View Plate 7: Tenrecidae

Nasolo’s Shrew Tenrec

Microgale nasoloi View in CoL

French: Microgale de Nasolo / German: Nasolo-Kleintenrek / Spanish: Tenrec musarafa de Nasolo

Taxonomy. Microgale nasoloiJenkins & Goodman, 1999 View in CoL ,

“Vohibasia Forest [= Forét de Vohibasia], 59 km northeast of Sakaraha, Province de Toliara, southwestern Madagascar, 22°27-5’ S, 44°50-5’ E, 780 m.”

Microgale nasoloi View in CoL and M. fotsifotsy View in CoL form a clade. Monotypic.

Distribution. W (Amboropotsy and Lambokely forests) & SW (Vohibasia and Analavelona forests) Madagascar. View Figure

Descriptive notes. Head-body 70-81 mm, tail 50-62 mm, ear 15-16 mm, hindfoot 11-14 mm; weight 6-14 g. Tail of Nasolo’s Shrew Tenrec is 60-80% of head-body length. Eyes are moderately large, and pinnae are large and prominent. Pelage is soft and

fine in texture, gray dorsally, grading into darker gray ventrally. Tail is gray, slightly darker above than below, and well covered with long scale hairs.

Habitat. Transitional dry deciduous forests, an isolated massif with eastern humid forest and western deciduous forest elements, lowland dry deciduous forest, and dry and humid to sub-humid forests at elevations of 80-1050 m.

Food and Feeding. No information.

Breeding. Three embryos were found in a wild-caught Nasolo’s Shrew Tenrec .

Activity patterns. Based on the trap position of 1-5 m above the ground where the type specimen was caught, Nasolo’s Shrew Tenrec is probably terrestrial but capable of scrambling on branches and vines in the lower understory.

Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information.

Status and Conservation. Classified as Vulnerable on The IUCN Red List. Nasolo’s Shrew Tenrec is known from only four locations and has an extent of occurrence of ¢.13,000 km* with continuing habitat degradation. Populations are probably decreasing. Major threats are habitat loss and degradation due to deforestation for pastoral grazing and use offires for forest clearing.

Bibliography. Everson et al. (2016), Goodman et al. (2013), Jenkins (2003), Jenkins & Goodman (1999), Soarimalala & Goodman (2008, 2011), Stephenson et al. (2016ad).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Afrosoricida

Family

Tenrecidae

Genus

Microgale

Loc

Microgale nasoloi

Russell A. Mittermeier & Don E. Wilson 2018
2018
Loc

Microgale nasoloi

Jenkins & Goodman 1999
1999
Loc

Microgale nasoloi

Jenkins & Goodman 1999
1999
Loc

fotsifotsy

Jenkins, Raxworthy & Nussbaum 1997
1997
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF