Jump to content

Earless water rat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ucucha (talk | contribs) at 19:17, 20 May 2006 (Characteristics: +non-metric system). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Earless Water Rat
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Crossomys
Species:
C. moncktoni
Binomial name
Crossomys moncktoni
Thomas, 1907

The Earless Water Rat (Crossomys moncktoni) is a New Guinea rodent, part of the Hydromys group of the subfamily of Old World rats and mice (Murinae). It is the only species of the genus Crossomys. This species is probably most closely related to Baiyankamys.[1] It is still unclear to which species this group is related. It is one of the most aquatically adapted rodents of the world.

History of discovery

This animal was first described in 1907 by the British mammalogist Oldfield Thomas, based on a single specimen caught near Brown River, Central Province, south-east Papua New Guinea. Only in July 1950 a second specimen was captured. Since then, several other examples have been caught in the mountains of eastern New Guinea, but the Earless Water Rat remains a rather rare species.

Relationships

The German mammalogist Hans Rümmler placed this rodent (and Parahydromys asper) in Hydromys[2], but that has not been accepted generally. Lidicker (1968), who studies the morphology of the phallus of New Guinea rodents, speculated that Crossomys might not be as closely related to Hydromys as was then generally thought[3]. Later on, this was supported by the immunological study of Watts & Baverstock (1994)[4]. This study placed Crossomys closer to Leptomys, Pseudohydromys and Xeromys than to Hydromys.

The American mammalogists Guy Musser and Michael Carleton, in their contribution to the authoritative Mammal Species of the World (3rd ed.), divided the group of murine rodents that had before been called "Hydromyinae" or "Hydromyini" in two "divisions"[5]: the Xeromys Division (Leptomys, Pseudohydromys and Xeromys) and the Hydromys Division (Crossomys, Hydromys, Microhydromys, Paraleptomys and Parahydromys [Baiyankamys was added later[1]]). According to them, the morphology of Crossomys is more like the Hydromys Division than the Xeromys Division, and therefore they placed it in the Hydromys group. They supported their opinion with an unpublished study of the Australian biologist Ken Aplin, who also placed Crossomys closer to Hydromys.

Helgen (2005) concluded that Crossomys is most closely related to Baiyankamys, which had before been placed in Hydromys[1]. Baiyankamys has not been studied genetically. According to him, the Crossomys-Baiyankamys group is most closely related to Hydromys and Parahydromys, though he did not give material to support his opinion.

Characteristics

Distribution of the Earless Water Rat and related species.

Of all muroids, the Earless Water Rat is adapted best to a life in water. It has extremely long hindfeet, the toes of which are webbed completely, strongly reduced forelegs, absent or unvisible ears, very small eyes, and a long tail with a row of hairs at the downside. That row starts at each side of the beginning of the tail as a long white row of hairs; these two rows merge together at about 50 mm from the beginning of the tail and the row goes on to the end of the tail. In all these characters, it resembles the Web-footed Water Shrew (Nectogale elegans), a good example of convergent evolution.

The back is greyish brown, and the belly is white. The fur is soft and water-proof. The top half of the tail is light grey, and the bottom half is white. The forefeet and claws are very small, but the hindfeet are very large. The upper lip contains a row of short, strong brushes, which may be used for rasping. The external ear (the pinna) is reduced to a small oval that does not or hardly protract above the fur. It is possible that the ear canal can be closed. The brain is rather large, like in many aquatic animals. The nasals are relatively small, just like the palate and the molars. The bullae are small. The rostrum is narrow. The Earless Water Rat is a medium-sized rat, about as large as its close relative Baiyankamys. The head-body length is 175 to 200 mm (6.9 - 7.9 inch) (based on four specimens), tail lengh is 212 to 260 mm (8.3 - 10.2 inch) (4), hind foot length is 44 to 53 mm (1.7 - 2.1 inch) (4), ear length is 1 to 4,5 mm (0.2 - 7.9 inch) (2), and weight 165 g (5.8 ounce avoirdupois) (1)[6]. Females have 0+2=4 mammae (no thoracic and two inguinal pairs), as do most other Australasian rodents.

The Earless Water Rat and Baiyankamys are related because they share the following characters: tail much longer than head-body length; soft, thick, greyish dorsal coat; long, narrow rostrum with a narrow top; very narrow canines; very narrow mesopterygoid fossae; narrow zygomatic arches with a high squamosal root. B. habbema also has the reduced external ears of the Earless Water Rat[1].

Distribution, habitat and behavior

This animal lives at 1000 to 27000 meters in elevation in the Central Cordillera of Papua New Guinea, including the Huon peninsula. The cold, fast-flowing streams of the mountains are its habitat.

At night it sleeps in holes at the river bank, but at day it is active and hunting for tadpoles, worms and river insects (mostly larvae). The animal gets only one young at the same time. It's only captured by Telefol hunters when river levels are low[6].

It is called kwypep by the Kalam tribe (Madang Province), possibly ogoyam by the Telefol (Sandaun Province) and momo by the Rofaifo (Southern Highlands Province), although that name is also used for other water rats, like the common water rat. Some local names can be translated as "water sugar glider", which refers to the similarity of the fur of these two species[6].

Little is known about the conservation status of this species, although it has the status "least concern" in the IUCN Red List [1].

References

  1. ^ a b c d Helgen, K.M. 2005. The amphibious murines of New Guinea (Rodentia, Muridae): the generic status of Baiyankamys and description of a new species of Hydromys. Zootaxa 913:1-20.
  2. ^ Rümmler, H. 1938. Die Systematik und Verbreitung der Muriden Neuguineas. Mitteilungen aus dem Zoologische Museum in Berlin 23:1-297.
  3. ^ Lidicker, W. Z., Jr. 1968. A phylogeny of New Guinea rodent genera based on phallic morphology. Journal of Mammalogy 49:609-643.
  4. ^ Watts, C.H.S. & Baverstock, P.R. 1994. Evolution in New Guinean Muridae (Rodentia) assessed by microcomplement fixation of albumin. Australian Journal of Zoology 42:295-306.
  5. ^ Musser, G.G. & Carleton, M.D. 2005. Superfamily Muroidea. In Wilson, D.E. & Reeder, D.M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World. 3rd ed.
  6. ^ a b c Flannery, T.F. 1995. Mammals of New Guinea. Chatswood, New South Wales: Reed Books, 568 pp.

Other literature used

  • Nowak, R.M. 1999. Walker's Mammals of the World. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801857899
  • Tate, G.H.H. 1951a. Results of the Archbold Expeditions. No. 65. The rodents of Australia and New Guinea. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 97:183-430.
  • Tate, G.H.H. 1951b. A second specimen of the Papuan earless water rat, Crossomys moncktoni. American Museum Novitates 1523:1-4.
  • Thomas, O. 1907. On three new mammals from British New Guinea. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (7)20:70-74. Template:Link FA