Published December 31, 2005 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Mastomys awashensis Lavrenchenko, Likhnova, and Baskevich 1998

Description

Mastomys awashensis Lavrenchenko, Likhnova, and Baskevich 1998

Mastomys awashensis Lavrenchenko, Likhnova, and Baskevich 1998, in: Lavrenchenko et al., 1998a, Z. Saugetierk., Vol. 63: 44.

Type Locality: Ethiopia, "collected at the bank of the Awash River near Koka Lake" (Lavrenchenko et al., 1998 a:46), 08E23'N 39E09'E.

Vernacular Names: Awash Mastomys.

Distribution: Apparently endemic to the Ethiopian Rift Valley where it "is confined to a small part of the Upper Awash Valley" (Lavrenchenko et al., 1998 a:48). All known examples were captured at the E bank of Koka Lake and Awash National Park where they inhabit Awash riverbank vegetated by Acacia-Commiphora thornbush with high grass, and adjacent agricultural habitats.

Discussion: This species occurs with M. natalensis and M. erythroleucus in the same region. Karyotype of M. awashensis (2n = 32, FNa = 54, Lavrenchenko et al., 1998 a; or 2n = 32, FNa = 52, Volobouev et al., 2002 b) is dissimilar to that of M. erythroleucus (2n = 38, FN = 50) and resembles karyotype of M. natalensis from the Ethiopian Rift Valley (2n = 32, FNa = 54-56), but the two are distinguished by frequency of metacentric and submetacentric elements, form of the Y-chromosome, and C-banding pattern (Baskevich and Orlov, 1993; Lavrenchenko et al., 1998 a). Analyses of allozymic and morphometric data indicate M. awashensis is more closely related to M. erythroleucus than to M. natalensis, but M. awashensis and M. natalensis are more similar in chromosomal traits and configuration of tail scales; in glans penis morphology, M. awashensis differs from either of the other species, which are similar in that character complex (Lavrenchenko and Baskevich, 1996; Lavrenchenko et al., 1998 a). Mastomys awashensis shares a common fixed hemoglobin electromorph with South African M. coucha, different from that found in Ethiopian M. natalensis and M. erythroleucus (Lavrenchenko et al., 1992, 1998 a). Those latter authors noted that the discordance among morphometric, genital, molecular, and chromosomal character suites in distinguishing samples of the three Ethiopian species may reflect a mosaic pattern of evolution. Character discordance, however, has not been an unappreciated reality to generations of working systematists, as many morphologically similar sets of species can only be distinguished by a combination of traits.

Yalden and Largen (1992) claimed that mammalian endemics of Ethiopia are associated with open habitats at high altitude or with forest blocks and are not found in the Awash Valley and other dry lowlands. Lavrenchenko et al. (1998 a:49) used the occurrence of M. awashensis and a species of Acomys (uniquely defined by chromosomal traits according to Sokolov et al., 1993) in the upper Awash Valley as exceptions to Yalden and Largen’s proclamation, noting that the valley "with its unique rodent fauna is an integral part of the Ethiopian region with high faunistic diversity and endemism.".

Notes

Published as part of Wilson, Don E. & Reeder, DeeAnn, 2005, Order Rodentia - Family Muridae, pp. 1189-1531 in Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3 rd Edition), Volume 2, Baltimore :The Johns Hopkins University Press on page 1361, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7316535

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References

  • Lavrenchenko, L. A., O. P. Likhnova, M. I. Baskevich, and A. Bekele. 1998 a. Systematics and distribution of Mastomys (Muridae, Rodentia) from Ethiopia, with the description of a new species. Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde, 63: 37 - 51.
  • Volobouev, V. T., V. M. Aniskin, E. Lecompte, and J. F. Ducroz. 2002 b. Patterns of karyotype evolution in complexes of sibling species within three genera of African murid rodents inferred from the comparison of cytogenetic and molecular data. Cytogenetic and Genome Research, 96: 261 - 275.
  • Lavrenchenko, L. A., and M. I. Baskevich. 1996. Variation of generative system structure in some species of the genus Mastomys Thomas, 1915 (Rodentia, Muridae). Mammalia, 60 (2): 277 - 288.
  • Lavrenchenko, L. A., O. P. Likhnova, and V. N. Orlov. 1992. [Hemoglobin patterns: A possible implication in systematics of multimammate rats Mastomys (Muridae, Rodentia).] Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 71 (8): 85 - 93 (in Russian with English abstract).
  • Yalden, D. W., and M. J. Largen. 1992. The endemic mammals of Ethiopia. Mammal Review, 22: 115 - 150.