Thylogale Gray, 1837

Rose, Randolph W. & Rose, Robert K., 2018, Thylogale billardierii (Diprotodontia: Macropodidae), Mammalian Species 50 (965), pp. 100-108 : 100-101

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1093/mspecies/sey012

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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:022B7817-9037-4B26-96FF-2D2488D63FB7

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scientific name

Thylogale Gray, 1837
status

 

Thylogale Gray, 1837

Thylogale: Gray, 1837:583 . Part; subgenus of Halmaturus .

Type species Halmaturus [( Thylogale )] eugenii Gray, 1837 (= Halmaturus thetis Lesson, 1827 ) by monotypy.

CONTEXT AND CONTENT. Order Diprotodontia , superfamily Macropodoidea ,family Macropodidae , subfamily Macropodinae . The genus Thylogale includes the following 6 living species ( Calaby and Richardson 1988; Groves 1993): Thylogale browni , T. brunii , T. calabyi , T. stigmatica , and T. thetis . A key to species of Thylogale (derived from LeSouef et al. 1926; Flannery 1992, 1995; Menkhorst and Knight 2001) follows:

1. Belly fur white to the roots. Distribution: Aru, Kei, other islands, and southern Papua New Guinea …………… … … … … … … … … … … … … … … …. … T. b r u n i i

Belly fur gray, orange, cream, other………………………2

2. Neck, shoulders, and forehead rich rufousred, belly fur cream, no cheek- or hip-stripes. Distribution: coastal rain- and wet sclerophyll forests from central Queensland to central New South Wales ………………………......…………..…… T. thetis

Neck and shoulders gray or brown…………………..……3

3. White cheek-stripe and buff hip-stripe, reddish legs. Distribution: tip of Cape York, Queensland to Tamworth, New South Wales; Papua New Guinea south of Fly River ………………………...……………...…… T. stigmatica Lacks both cheek- and hip-stripes………………...………4

4. Belly fur orange to rufous-red, no facial or hip markings. Distribution: now restricted to Tasmania ……………… …………………………………...…..…… T. billardierii Belly fur gray…………………………………..…………5

5. Gray belly fur tipped with yellow, densely furred tail, small body size, well-marked hip-stripe, axils of limbs with small patches of bare skin. Distribution: alpine zone of eastern Papua New Guinea ………………………...……………… T. calabyi Gray belly fur without yellow fringe, no hip-stripe, large patches of bare skin in axils of limbs. Distribution: northern Papua New Guinea and Northeastern IrianJaya………………….……………… T. browni

CALABY, J. H., and B. J. RICHARDSON. 1988. Macropodidae. Pp. 60 - 80 in Mammalia, Vol. 5, Zoological catalogue of Australia (J. L. Bannister, J H. Calaby, L. J. Dawson, J. K. Ling, J. A. Mahoney, G. M. McKay, B. J. Richardson, W. D. L. Ride, and D. W. Walton, eds.). Australian Government Printing Service, Canberra, Australia.

FLANNERY, T. F. 1992. Taxonomic revision of the Thylogale brunii complex (Macropodidae: Marsupialia) in Melanesia, with description of a new species. Australian Mammalogy 15: 7 - 23.

FLANNERY, T. F. 1995. Mammals of New Guinea. Reed Books Australia, Chatwood, New South Wales, Australia.

GRAY, J. E. 1837. Description of some new or little known Mammalia, principally in the British Museum collection. Magazine of Natural History and Journal of Zoology, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, and Meteorology 1: 577 - 587.

GROVES, C. P. 1993. Order Diprotodontia. Pp. 45 - 62 in Mammal species of the world, a taxonomic and geographic reference (D. E. Wilson and D. A. M. Reeder, eds.). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C.

LESOUEF, A. S., H. BURRELL, and E. LEG. TROUGHTON. 1926. The wild animals of Australasia. Harrap & Company, London, United Kingdom.

LESSON, R. P. 1827. Manuel de mammalogie ou histoire naturelle des mammiferes. Roret, Paris, France.

MENKHORST, P., and F. KNIGHT. 2001. A field guide to the mammals of Australia. Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Diprotodontia

Family

Macropodidae