Small mammals of the Estação Ecológica de Bananal, southeastern Atlantic Forest, Brazil, with description of a new species of Brucepattersonius (Rodentia, Sigmodontinae)
{"title":"Small mammals of the Estação Ecológica de Bananal, southeastern Atlantic Forest, Brazil, with description of a new species of Brucepattersonius (Rodentia, Sigmodontinae)","authors":"E. F. Abreu-Júnior, A. Percequillo","doi":"10.11606/2176-7793/2019.50.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Atlantic Forest harbors an impressive diversity of nonvolant small mammals. Despite having been the target of many ecological and taxonomical studies in the last decades, this group is still poorly known in several aspects – basic information on intrapopulational morphologic variation and proper diagnoses are lacking for many species, even for common taxa. This is related to the fact that large series of specimens from a single locality are extremely rare in scientific collections. A consistent sampling effort was conducted at Estação Ecológica de Bananal, northeastern São Paulo State, throughout seven field expeditions between 2003 and 2011, under the coordination of the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, resulting in extensive series of nonvolant small mammals. We studied in detail the external and cranio-dental morphology of this sample (575 specimens), that we assigned to 31 known species besides one new species to science. Most species belong to order Rodentia (26 species) from the families Cricetidae (22 species) and Echimyidae (four species); the remaining (six species) are marsupials from the order Didelphimorphia, family Didelphidae. This is one of the most diverse assemblages ever recorded in this biome, and includes some of the rarest endemic rodents of the Atlantic Forest, such as Abrawayaomys ruschii, Blarinomys breviceps, Drymoreomys albimaculatus, Phaenomys ferrugineus, Phyllomys kerri and Rhagomys rufescens. This outstanding richness can be explained by the extensive sampling effort performed for a long period of time. Also, the capture success of the third expedition (8.25%) is among the highest rates obtained in the Atlantic Forest and the extensive use of pitfall traps was fundamental for trapping this high number of species. Herein, we provide an annotated list of nonvolant small mammals occurring at Estação Ecológica de Bananal, with comprehensive analyses of morphological variation and detailed diagnoses that will allow their proper identification, and will provide a sound basis for a better comprehension of the geographic variation of these taxa across the biome. We also present a formal description for a new species of Brucepattersonius from the mountain ranges along the Paraíba do Sul valley. For five species of sigmodontine rodents, we investigate the levels of ontogenetic and sexual variation, and while the first is accentuate in all analyzed species the second does not contribute significantly to intrapopulation variation.","PeriodicalId":274949,"journal":{"name":"Arquivos de Zoologia","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-07-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"10","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Arquivos de Zoologia","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.11606/2176-7793/2019.50.01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 10
Abstract
The Atlantic Forest harbors an impressive diversity of nonvolant small mammals. Despite having been the target of many ecological and taxonomical studies in the last decades, this group is still poorly known in several aspects – basic information on intrapopulational morphologic variation and proper diagnoses are lacking for many species, even for common taxa. This is related to the fact that large series of specimens from a single locality are extremely rare in scientific collections. A consistent sampling effort was conducted at Estação Ecológica de Bananal, northeastern São Paulo State, throughout seven field expeditions between 2003 and 2011, under the coordination of the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, resulting in extensive series of nonvolant small mammals. We studied in detail the external and cranio-dental morphology of this sample (575 specimens), that we assigned to 31 known species besides one new species to science. Most species belong to order Rodentia (26 species) from the families Cricetidae (22 species) and Echimyidae (four species); the remaining (six species) are marsupials from the order Didelphimorphia, family Didelphidae. This is one of the most diverse assemblages ever recorded in this biome, and includes some of the rarest endemic rodents of the Atlantic Forest, such as Abrawayaomys ruschii, Blarinomys breviceps, Drymoreomys albimaculatus, Phaenomys ferrugineus, Phyllomys kerri and Rhagomys rufescens. This outstanding richness can be explained by the extensive sampling effort performed for a long period of time. Also, the capture success of the third expedition (8.25%) is among the highest rates obtained in the Atlantic Forest and the extensive use of pitfall traps was fundamental for trapping this high number of species. Herein, we provide an annotated list of nonvolant small mammals occurring at Estação Ecológica de Bananal, with comprehensive analyses of morphological variation and detailed diagnoses that will allow their proper identification, and will provide a sound basis for a better comprehension of the geographic variation of these taxa across the biome. We also present a formal description for a new species of Brucepattersonius from the mountain ranges along the Paraíba do Sul valley. For five species of sigmodontine rodents, we investigate the levels of ontogenetic and sexual variation, and while the first is accentuate in all analyzed species the second does not contribute significantly to intrapopulation variation.
大西洋森林里栖息着种类繁多的小型哺乳动物。尽管在过去的几十年里,这个群体已经成为许多生态学和分类学研究的目标,但在几个方面仍然知之甚少-许多物种,甚至是常见的分类群,缺乏关于种群内形态变异的基本信息和适当的诊断。这与来自一个地方的大量标本在科学收藏中极为罕见的事实有关。在圣保罗大学动物博物馆的协调下,在2003年至2011年期间,在圣保罗州东北部的esta o Ecológica de Bananal进行了七次实地考察,结果发现了一系列广泛的非自愿性小型哺乳动物。我们详细研究了这个样本(575个标本)的外部和颅牙形态,我们将其归为31个已知物种,除了一个新物种。大多数种类属于啮齿目(26种),其中蟋蟀科(22种)和刺螨科(4种);剩下的(6种)是有袋动物,属于有袋动物目,有袋动物科。这是该生物群系中记录的最多样化的组合之一,包括大西洋森林中一些最稀有的特有啮齿动物,如Abrawayaomys ruschii, Blarinomys breviceps, Drymoreomys albimaculatus, Phaenomys ferrugineus, Phyllomys kerri和Rhagomys rufescens。这种突出的丰富性可以用长时间进行的大量采样来解释。此外,第三次探险的捕获成功率(8.25%)是大西洋森林中获得的最高成功率之一,陷阱的广泛使用是捕获如此大量物种的基础。在此,我们提供了一份发生在esta o Ecológica de Bananal的非变异小型哺乳动物的注释清单,并对其形态变异进行了全面的分析和详细的诊断,从而使它们能够正确地识别,并为更好地理解这些分类群在整个生物群系中的地理变异提供了良好的基础。我们还提出了一种新的布鲁帕特球菌的正式描述从山脉沿Paraíba do Sul山谷。对5种西齿齿类动物的个体发生变异和性别变异水平进行了研究,发现个体发生变异在所有被分析物种中都很突出,而性别变异对种群内变异的影响不显著。