Graphiurus (Graphiurus) angolensis de Winton 1897
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7316535 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11355544 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E965BB00-BD21-9EA0-B8F3-477DD335F6A3 |
treatment provided by |
Guido |
scientific name |
Graphiurus (Graphiurus) angolensis de Winton 1897 |
status |
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Graphiurus (Graphiurus) angolensis de Winton 1897 View in CoL
Graphiurus (Graphiurus) angolensis de Winton 1897 View in CoL , Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 6, 20: 320.
Type Locality: Angola, Caconda .
Vernacular Names: Angolan African Dormouse.
Synonyms: Graphiurus (Graphiurus) dasilvai ( Roberts 1938) ; Graphiurus (Graphiurus) parvulus Monard 1933 .
Distribution: Angola ( Hill and Carter, 1941) and NW Zambia ( Ansell, 1978).
Discussion: Subgenus Graphiurus . Following the arrangement of Ellerman et al. (1953), Holden (1993) provisionally assigned dasilvai and parvulus as synonyms of G. platyops . Ansell (1974, 1978) recognized that the NW Zambian population (identified by him as G. platyops parvulus ) is morphologically and ecologically different from G. platyops . Based on my study of type specimens and large series of Angolan and Zambian specimens, the Angolan and NW Zambia populations exhibit a distinctive skull morphology that is consistently separable from that of G. platyops and G. rupicola . Ansell (1974, 1978) correctly surmised that these populations are probably phylogenetically aligned with G. microtis .
Graphiurus angolensis (de Winton, 1897) , precedes Graphiurus parvulus Monard, 1932 , and is the correct name for these populations. Assigning parvulus as a junior synonym is problematic. In describing parvulus, Monard (1933) did not designate a holotype, based his description upon several specimens, and listed three localities where he caught this dormouse. He later provided a more detailed description of parvulus , identified nine specimens as representing the species, along with a table of measurements ( Monard, 1935). I examined several of Monard’s specimens; most are either young or poorly preserved, and except for their paler dorsal pelage color, the material appears inseparable from samples of G. angolensis .
Graphiurus ocularis , which occurs in South Africa, was reported from Parc National de l’Upemba, Dem. Rep. Congo ( Verschuren, 1987). The specimen upon which the G. ocularis record appears to be based (examined by me in IRSNB) consists of only a skin that closely resembles G. angolensis , although it could possibly represent a large or overstuffed individual of G. microtis ; the skin is not an example of G. ocularis . The relationship between populations representing G. angolensis and G. microtis needs to be studied and documented. Reviewed by Holden (In Press) .
IRSNB |
Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique |
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