Sciurus sanborni Osgood, 1944

Palmer, Rosa R & Koprowski, John L, 2017, Sciurus sanborni (Rodentia: Sciuridae), Mammalian Species 49 (952), pp. 93-96 : 93-95

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/mspecies/sex010

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0F712D0F-B545-4F5E-99B3-4324EFEDE488

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C58038-7777-FFEF-FE90-FC2CFDA3F95C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sciurus sanborni Osgood, 1944
status

 

Sciurus sanborni Osgood, 1944 View in CoL

Sanborn’s Squirrel

Sciurus sanborni Osgood, 1944:191 View in CoL . Type locality “La Pampa,

between Rio Inambari and Rio Tambopata, about twenty miles north of Santo Domingo, Madre de Dios, Peru.

Altitude about 1,900 feet.”

CONTEXT AND CONTENT. Order Rodentia , suborder Sciuromorpha , family Sciuridae , subfamily Sciurinae , tribe Sciurini , genus Sciurus , subgenus Guerlinguetus . No subspecies are recognized for Sciurus sanborni (Wilson and Reeder 2005; Thorington et al. 2012).

NOMENCLATURAL NOTES. Sciurus sanborni was retained as a valid species by Cabrera (1961) and Thorington and Hoffmann (2005). Osgood (1944:192) noted the species “differs so widely from all heretofore known species that its distinctness is scarcely to be doubted.” However, additional study may be necessary to clarify the validity and affinities of this taxon as its status as a unique species was questioned by Voss and Emmons (1996). Emmons and Feer (1997) suggest that S. sanborni may be a subspecies of Sciurus aestuans , whereas Osgood (1944) notes that Sciurus ignitus might be most similar.

Sciurus View in CoL is the Latin word for “squirrel” ( Jaeger 1955), and is derived from the Greek skia, meaning “shade,” and oura, meaning “tail” ( Borror 1960). The specific epithet refers to the collector of the type specimen, Colin C. Sanborn ( Osgood 1944). Common names include ardilla de Sanborn ( Pacheco et al. 2009).

DIAGNOSIS

The range of Sciurus sanborni overlaps with the range of the northern Amazon red squirrel ( Sciurus igniventris ) and the southern Amazon red squirrel ( Sciurus spadiceus ), Junín red squirrel ( Sciurus pyrrhinus ), Bolivian squirrel ( Sciurus ignitus ), and Amazon dwarf squirrel ( Microsciurus flaviventer ). S. sanborni can be distinguished from other sympatric sciurids by its smaller body size and coloration pattern (Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012). S. igniventris is 60%, S. spadiceus is 58%, and S. pyrrhinus is 40% larger in total length compared to S. sanborni (313–359 mm), and their coloration is mainly a variation of red and orange, not olive brown like S. sanborni (Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012). S. ignitus is 10–15% larger in total length, and although the dorsum is brown, S. ignitus has a gray inguinal region, feet the same color as the dorsum, and an indistinct pale buffy to ochraeceous eye ring (Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012). The Amazon dwarf squirrel is also brown but is 20–25% smaller than S. sanborni with smaller ears that do not protrude above the crown (Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012).

GENERAL CHARACTERS

Sciurus sanborni is a small-bodied tree squirrel with uniform olive brown dorsum, bright pale buff eye rings and areas around the mouth, and thinly haired ears that protrude above the crown and have bright white or buff patches behind each ear ( Osgood 1944; Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012). The feet are yellowish and sometimes distinctly paler than the dorsum (Emmons and Feer 1997). The venter, including inner thighs, is entirely pure white or yellowish orange and contrasts sharply with the sides ( Osgood 1944; Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012). Usually the tail is the same color as the dorsum but faint black banding can occur on the tail when individuals have a more grizzled appearance ( Fig. 1 View Fig ; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012). There is no geographic variation in coloration ( Thorington et al. 2012).

External measurements (ranges or mean; mm) for S. sanborni were: total length, 313–359 ( Osgood 1944; Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012); length of head and body, 152–175 (Emmons and Feer 1997; (Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012); length of tail, 161–184 ( Osgood 1944; Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Thorington et al. 2012); length of hind foot, 44–50 ( Osgood 1944; Emmons and Feer 1997); and length of ears, 20–21 (Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999). Cranial measurements (1 female; mm) were: total length, 42.3; basilar length, 32.3; zygomatic breadth, 23.9; breadth of braincase, 21.1; interorbital breadth, 13.9; breadth between tips of postorbital processes, 19; median length of nasals, 9.3; diastema, 10.8; width of palate between inner bases of premolars, 6.9; length of upper toothrow, 6.9; length of exposed front surface of upper incisors, 5; and anteroposterior width of upper incisor, 1.3 ( Osgood 1944).

DISTRIBUTION

Sciurus sanborni is a rare endemic of the Madre de Dios region in southeastern Peru, found in lowland Amazonian rainforest between the mouth of the Río Manu and the Río Tambopata at elevations between 300 and 580 m ( Fig. 2 View Fig ; Emmons and Feer 1997; Eisenberg and Redford 1999; Pacheco 2002; Wilson and Reeder 2005; Amori et al. 2008; Thorington et al. 2012). S. sanborni is also likely to be found in Bolivia (Emmons and Feer 1997). The total range for S. sanborni is 48,842.21 km 2 ( Amori et al. 2013).

FOSSIL RECORD

Sciurus sanborni , and the family Sciuridae in general, lack a fossil record in South America ( Simpson 1980). However, tree squirrels are believed to have been in South America since the Pleistocene ( Simpson 1980).

FORM AND FUNCTION

In the subgenus Guerlinguetus , the sphenopalatine foramen in the skull is slightly larger than the sphenoidal fissure and the orbit is about medium length ( Fig. 3 View Fig ; Moore 1959). Sciurus sanborni has a narrow and anteriorly depressed skull, the rostral portion has evenly sloping sides, the nasals are short, the postorbital processes are short and weak and end at the level of the last molar, the anterior edge of the maxillary root of the zygoma is not continuous with a rounded and outer edge of the ascending premaxilla, the palate is wide and evenly convex and does not have a median ridge, and the auditory bullae are relatively large and slightly greater in size than in S. aestuans ( Osgood 1944) . The incisors in S. sanborni are very slender and weak, the upper teeth are very short, P3 is absent, P4 is small (<33% the size of the molar), and M2 has a metastyle more evident than in S. ignitus and similar to that of S. aestuans ( Osgood 1944) .

ONTOGENY AND REPRODUCTION

The type specimen, a subadult female, was collected 23 October 1941. The number of mammae was not evident ( Osgood 1944). No other information is available.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Rodentia

Family

Sciuridae

Genus

Sciurus

Loc

Sciurus sanborni Osgood, 1944

Palmer, Rosa R & Koprowski, John L 2017
2017
Loc

Sciurus sanborni

OSGOOD, W. H. 1944: 191
1944
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