Lophuromys (Lophuromys) aquilus True 1892
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7316535 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11358046 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/18051031-7087-D319-4AF5-8728B505EEAE |
treatment provided by |
Guido |
scientific name |
Lophuromys (Lophuromys) aquilus True 1892 |
status |
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Lophuromys (Lophuromys) aquilus True 1892 View in CoL
Lophuromys (Lophuromys) aquilus True 1892 View in CoL , Proc. U. S. Natl. Mus ., 15: 460.
Type Locality: East Africa, Tanzania, Mt Kilimanjaro, 8000 ft (2650 m; coordinates given by W. Verheyen et al., 2002).
Vernacular Names: Dark-colored Brush-furred Rat.
Synonyms: Lophuromys (Lophuromys) cinereus Dieterlen and Gelmroth 1974 ; Lophuromys (Lophuromys) laticeps Thomas and Wroughton 1907 ; Lophuromys (Lophuromys) major Thomas and Wroughton 1907 ; Lophuromys (Lophuromys) margarettae Heller 1912 ; Lophuromys (Lophuromys) rita Dollman 1910 ; Lophuromys (Lophuromys) rubecula Dollman 1909 .
Distribution: Lowland and montane habitats from NE Angola ( Crawford-Cabral, 1998) throughout the Dem. Rep. Congo, Rwanda ( Corti et al., 2000; Monfort, 1992) and Burundi ( Maddalena et al., 1989) to Uganda (Delaney, 1975), Kenya ( Hollister, 1919; except montane habitats on Aberdare Range and Mt Kenya; see account of L. zena ), and south through Tanzania (Swinnerton and Hayman, 1951; except Mt Meru; see account of L. verhageni ) to Malawi ( Ansell and Dowsett, 1988), N Zambia ( Ansell, 1978), and NE Mozambique (Smithers and Lobão Tello, 1976); recorded as either L. aquilus or L. flavopunctatus in faunal accounts.
Conservation: IUCN – Data Deficient as L. cinereus .
Discussion: Subgenus Lophuromys , L. aquilus species group (W. Verheyen et al., 2002). Described as a species, which was recognized in early checklists (G. M. Allen, 1939; Ellerman, 1940 d), but subsequently included in L. flavopunctatus ( Misonne, 1974; Musser and Carleton, 1993). Analyses of morphometric traits and mtDNA cytochrome b sequences by W. Verheyen et al. (2002) demonstrated the conspecificity of the synonyms with L. aquilus and definition of the species relative to others in the L. flavopunctatus complex of species. Geographic samples of L. aquilus form a monophyletic clade most closely related to a clade containing the Ethiopian L. brunneus and L. chrysopus , and Kenyan L. zena , both clusters considered to be members of the L. aquilus species group (W. Verheyen et al., 2002). Maddalena et al. (1989) reported chromosomal data for Burundi sample. Three-dimensional geometric morphometrics was used by Corti et al. (2000) to look at patterns of growth and cranial size and shape in L. aquilus (reported as flavopunctatus ) compared with L. sikapusi and L. woosnami . Stanley et al. (2000) documented specimens from the Eastern Arc Mtns of Tanzania. Altitudinal distribution on Ugandan slopes of Ruwenzori Mtns reviewed by Kerbis Peterhans et al. (1998) in context of surveying small mammal distributions in those highlands (but samples from Ruwenzori Mtns are apparently a separate species in the L. aquilus group; W. Verheyen et al., 2002). Habitat and altitudinal distribution on Ugandan slopes of Mt Elgon recorded by Clausnitzer and Kityo (2001) and Clausnitzer et al. (2003; both as L. flavopunctatus ).
The holotype of rubecula is from the Kenyan slopes of Mt Elgon. In the morphometric analysis by W. Verheyen et al. (2002), it clusters with holotypes of the Ethiopian L. chrysopus , and Cameroon L. dieterleni and L. eisentrauti , suggesting close affinity; however, the rest of their sample from Mt Elgon bunches with those identified as L. aquilus . Dieterlen and Gelmroth (1974) described L. cinereus from Marais Mukaba in Parc National du Kahuzi-Biega (Dem. Rep. Congo), which was recorded only from the type locality. It is morphologically closely similar to what they called L. flavopunctatus , and possibly only a gray morph of that species: "Es ist nicht auszuschließen, daß die vier als Lophuromys cinereus beschriebenen Stücke graue Farbmutanten von L. flavopunctatus sind" ( Dieterlen, 1987:188). Identity of the holotype of cinereus with L. aquilus was confirmed by W. Verheyen et al. (2002).
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