occurrenceID	taxonID	catalogNumber	collectionCode	institutionCode	typeStatus	verbatimLabel	sex	individualCount	eventDate	recordedBy	recordNumber	decimalLatitude	decimalLongitude	minimumElevationInMeters	maximumElevationInMeters	minimumDepthInMeters	maximumDepthInMeters	country	stateProvince	municipality	locality	references	associatedOccurrences	associatedReferences	associatedSequences	basisOfRecord	eventRemarks	occurrenceRemarks
265C87D5FFEBF712FF45F9C23A01FC4B.mc.1E9D3C9EFFE8F712FF15FDE23A05FC4B	265C87D5FFEBF712FF45F9C23A01FC4B.taxon				paratype	According to the available evidence, the newly resurrected S. altilis represents a small-sized representative of the genus, occurring in ca. 1400 km long belt of rather low elevation areas of the Nile basin (Fig. 2). This belt could be demarcated by the Blue Nile regions in southeastern Sudan and northwestern Ethiopia in the north, the area of most abundant records from five localities in an area of ca. 150 × 100 km, and the eastern banks of Lake Victoria in southwestern Kenya. Its southern distribution may extend westwards to northeastern DR Congo, as assumed from earlier comparison of the Faradje specimens to the paratype specimen from Bados by Allen et al. (1917). In this range, S. altilis occurs in broad sympatry with S. leucogaster (e. g. Kruskop et al. 2016), from which the former could be distinguished by slightly smaller size, but mainly by the conspicuous greyish-brown coloration of the belly (Fig. 1). It also occurs in sympatry or close parapatry with S. colias (sensu Vallo et al. 2011; unpubl. records), which, however, markedly differs by its bright pelage coloration, the yellow belly and reddish-brown back		1										Sudan	An Nil al Azraq	Its	According	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/265C87D5FFEBF712FF45F9C23A01FC4B#1E9D3C9EFFE8F712FF15FDE23A05FC4B				MaterialCitation		
