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Type: Articles
Published: 2009-08-17
Page range: 58–68
Abstract views: 37
PDF downloaded: 2

On the taxonomic status of the harvest mouse Micromys minutus (Rodentia: Muridae) from Vietnam

Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya nab., 1, Saint-Petersburg, 199034, Russia Joint Vietnam-Russian Tropical Research and Technological Centre, Nguyen Van Huyen, Nghia Do, Cau Giay, Hanoi, Vietnam
A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninskiy pr., 33, Moscow, 119071, Russia
Joint Vietnam-Russian Tropical Research and Technological Centre, Nguyen Van Huyen, Nghia Do, Cau Giay, Hanoi, Vietnam A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninskiy pr., 33, Moscow, 119071, Russia
Mammalia mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b control region skull morphology phylogeography Micromys erythrotis

Abstract

The taxonomic status of the harvest mouse Micromys minutus from Vietnam is re-evaluated. The mtDNA analysis shows that the harvest mice from Lao Cai Province of northern Vietnam belongs to a distinct phylogenetic lineage, previously known only from a haplotype from Chengdu, Sichuan Province, southern China (Yasuda et al. 2005). The mtDNA analysis shows a strong genetic divergence among this lineage and all the other known haplotypes of Micromys minutus (11.68% for cytochrome b gene sequences). Canonical discriminant analysis of cranial and dental data, as well as of some external characters, also separate the Vietnam – South China group (also including an Indian specimen) from other Palaearctic populations. The skull of southern populations is relatively large, with a longer and broader palatine. The dorsal pelage of the Vietnamese specimens is grey, tinged with brown in comparison with the red-brown dorsal colouration sharply contrasting with the white underside in the majority of Euro-Siberian adults. The harvest mice of the Vietnam – South China group are distinguished from the typical European ones by their rather long tail that is about 120% of the body length (82 to 95% in the Palaearctic populations). Both genetic and morphological data suggest the existence of a second Micromys species, occurring at least in North Vietnam and South China. The available name for this species is Micromys erythrotis (Blyth, 1856).

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