MUSTELIDAE FISCHER, 1817
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https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2012.00868.x |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AA87D9-FFFD-FFE3-FC73-B0BAAFCF6C28 |
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MUSTELIDAE FISCHER, 1817 |
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FAMILY MUSTELIDAE FISCHER, 1817 View in CoL
TOTAL CLADE OF SUBFAMILY MELINAE BONAPARTE, 1838
Definition: The largest clade containing Meles meles ( Linnaeus, 1758) (Melinae) but not Mellivora capensis ( Schreber, 1776) (Mellivorinae) , Gulo gulo ( Linnaeus, 1758) (Guloninae) , Melogale moschata ( Gray, 1831) (Helictidinae) , or Taxidea taxus ( Schreber, 1778) (Taxidiinae) ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ).
Diagnosis: Mustelids distinguished by the following combination of features ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 , Table 1): angular process of the dentary situated dorsal to or at the level of the m1 crown (character 5, state 1; this process is secondarily ventral to the level of the m1 crown in Ferinestrix vorax ); P4 protocone small and subconical to ridge-like or absent (character 6, states 1–2); P4 hypocone present (character 7, states 1–2); M1 crown placed further laterally than the P4 crown (character 8, state 1); M1 larger than P 4 in occlusal view (character 9, states 1–2); lingual outline of the M1 crown concave in occlusal view (character 10, state 1; this trait varies in Melodon ); M1 metaconule prominent (character 12, state 1); m1 talonid larger than the m1 paraconid in occlusal view (character 13, state 1); m1 talonid basined with a welldeveloped lingual wall (character 14, state 1); m1 hypoconulid prominent (character 15, state 1); at least four elevations (cusps, cuspules, or ridge-like elevations) present in the lingual wall of the m1 talonid between the metaconid and hypoconulid (character 16, state 1).
Included taxa: Melinae Bonaparte, 1838 (including Arctonyx Cuvier, 1825 and Meles Brisson, 1762 ), Arctomeles Stach, 1951 , Ferinestrix Bjork, 1970 , and Melodon Zdansky, 1924 .
Comment: The subfamilial name Melinae is used throughout this paper in a restricted sense to refer to the crown clade of meline badgers, i.e. the smallest clade containing Meles meles and Arctonyx collaris ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ; Wolsan & Sato, 2010). This usage reflects the phylogenetic distinctiveness of the subfamilies Melinae, Taxidiinae, Mellivorinae , and Helictidinae, all of which contain species displaying the morpho- * Roshchin (1949) erected a new genus (which he named Parameles ) to include this species. Parameles Roshchin, 1949 is a junior homonym of Parameles Griffith in Cuvier, 1827 and Parameles de Saussure, 1869 . We regard this species as congeneric with Arctomeles pliocaenicus , and therefore we assign both species to Arctomeles Stach, 1951 , which is, to our knowledge, the oldest available name for this genus.
† Helgen et al. (2008) proposed three distinct extant species within Arctonyx . We conservatively recognize only one species, Arctonyx collaris , in agreement with Wozencraft (2005).
logical adaptations of badgers ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ; Koepfli et al., 2008; Sato et al., 2012), and also follows the increasingly accepted convention that widely known taxon names are applied to crown clades ( de Queiroz, 2007 and references therein).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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