Table of Contents: Volume 10 (1) 2011 (published 20 January 2012)
Taxonomic revision of Niviventer (Rodentia, Muridae) from Vietnam: a morphological and molecular approach Balakirev A.E., Abramov A.V., Rozhnov V.V. P. 1-26 Based on a comparative investigation of morphological and genetic data, a taxonomic revision of the genus Niviventer in Vietnam and the adjacent regions of East Indochina was carried out. The phylogenetic relationships within 13 species (N. andersoni, N. excelsior, N. eha, N. brahma, N. culturatus, N. coninga, N. rapit, N. niviventer, N. confucianus, N. tenaster, N. fulvescens, N. langbianis and N. cremoriventer) were investigated based on a full set of cytochrome b sequences and the cytochrome coxidase subunit I genes that are currently available. The full species rank for N. huang and N. bukit, which previously were regarded as forms of N. fulvescens, was approved. The occurrence of the members of the Malayan complex of species (N. tenaster, N. bukit and N. cremoriventer) among the mammal fauna of Southern Vietnam was established. The geographical distribution of the genetic lineages/species in Indochina is specified. It was shown that eight Niviventer species, namely N. niviventer, N. confucianus, N. bukit, N. tenaster, N. fulvescens, N. huang, N. langbianis and N. cremoriventer, occur in Vietnam. Some species (N. bukit, N. huang and N. langbianis) were demonstrated to be sympatrically distributed, whereas the others (N. fulvescens – N. huang and, apparently, N. cremoriventer – N. langbianis) formed vicariate pairs. Four species (N. niviventer, N. confucianus, N. fulvescens, and N. langbianis), were found to inhabit Northern Vietnam and the adjacent provinces of China (Yunnan, Guizhou); four species (N. tenaster, N. bukit, N. huang and N. langbianis) were recorded in the mountain regions of Central Vietnam and Laos; and three others (N. bukit, N. cremoriventer and N. huang) were found to inhabit most of the plains in Indochina, including Southern Vietnam, Cambodia, and a part of Thailand. It should be stressed that N. huang (but not N. fulvescens as it is usually considered) is the most common Niviventer species in Indochina, and its distribution range stretches over the plains of Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam up to the south-eastern provinces of China.
Craniometrical characters and indexes were studied by applying discriminant analysis; the species-specific pattern of skull proportions and its applicability for species identification were demonstrated for some of the characters and indexes. By morphological analysis of genetically verified specimens, morphologically detailed descriptions of the external appearance and structural traits of the skull were presented for all eight Vietnamese Niviventer species. Practical recommendations and guidelines for visual species identification are also given. The size of the body and skull, the comparative length and the specific pattern of coloration of the tail and tail tip as well as the dorsal side of the feet, the size and shape of the auditory bullae, the comparative length of the incisive foramina and the bony palatal bridge and the extent of development of supraorbital ridges were demonstrated to be the most informative features for species identification. Details Download PDF
| Primitive and derived features in the teeth of modern moose (Alces, Cervidae, Mammalia) from Eastern Siberia Nikolskiy P.A., Boeskorov G.G. P. 27-30 Variability of evolutionary relevant teeth morphology of modern moose from Eastern Siberia has been studied in comparison with the European form. Primitive deviations have been revealed in Eastern Siberian sample, that is rare in the teeth of moose from Europe. The data suggest that “American” and “European” moose have been developing independently for a long time, which could resulted in differentiation of moose in to two species, Alces alces L., 1758 (Europe, Western Siberia) and Alces americanus Clinton, 1822 (North America, Eastern Siberia, Far East).Details Download PDF
| Lyubov Anatolievna Tyutkova (1957 – 2011) Tleuberdina P., Tesakov A., Nazymbetova G. P. 31-34 ObituaryDetails Download PDF
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