Morphology and Mitochondrial Lineage Investigations Corroborate the Systematic Status and Pliocene Colonization of Suncus niger (Mammalia: Eulipotyphla) in the Western Ghats Biodiversity Hotspot of India

Author:

Kundu Shantanu1ORCID,Kamalakannan Manokaran23ORCID,Kim Ah Ran4ORCID,Hegde Vishwanath D.2,Banerjee Dhriti23,Jung Won-Kyo45ORCID,Kim Young-Mog45ORCID,Kim Hyun-Woo145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine Biology, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, Republic of Korea

2. Mammal and Osteology Section, Zoological Survey of India, M Block, New Alipore, Kolkata 700053, India

3. Western Ghat Regional Centre, Zoological Survey of India, Kozhikode 673006, India

4. Research Center for Marine Integrated Bionics Technology, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, Republic of Korea

5. Marine Integrated Biomedical Technology Center, National Key Research Institutes in Universities, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, Republic of Korea

Abstract

The Indian highland shrew, Suncus niger (Horsfield, 1851), is the least studied soricid species from its original range distribution in Southern India, with several systematics conundrums. Following its discovery in 1851, the species was synonymized with Suncus montanus (Kelaart, 1850) (endemic to Sri Lanka) and subsequently identified as a separate Indian population. However, the systematic status of S. niger from topotype specimens in Southern India has yet to be determined through an integrated approach. Both taxonomy and mitochondrial genetic data (Cytochrome b and 16S ribosomal RNA) were used to re-examine the systematics of S. niger. The mtCytb gene clearly distinguished topotypic S. niger from other Suncus species, with high genetic divergences varying from 8.49% to 26.29%. Further, the Bayesian and maximum likelihood topologies clearly segregated S. niger from other congeners and corroborated the sister relationship with S. stoliczkanus with expected divergence in the late Pliocene (2.62 MYA). The TimeTree analysis also exhibits a strong matrilineal affinity of S. dayi (endemic to India) toward the African species. The current study hypothesizes that the ancestor of the soricids evolved in Africa and that genetic lineages were subsequently shifted by plate tectonic events that subsequently colonized different continents as distinct species during the late Miocene (Tortonian) to the Holocene era. In addition to the new range expansion and elevation records of S. niger in the Central Western Ghats, we propose that additional sampling across its distribution, as well as the use of multiple genetic markers, may be useful in determining the genetic diversity and population structure of this endemic species. The present study also recommends that more molecular data on the Soricomorphs lineages, and estimates of their divergence times, will shed light on the evolution of these small mammals on Earth.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference73 articles.

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2. Molecular data from the holotype of the enigmatic Bornean Black Shrew, Suncus ater Medway, 1965 (Soricidae, Crocidurinae), place it in the genus Palawanosorex;Nations;Zookeys,2022

3. Discovery of a new mammal species (Soricidae: Eulipotyphla) from Narcondam volcanic island, India;Kamalakannan;Sci. Rep.,2021

4. Horsfield, T. (1851). A catalogue of the Mammalia in The Museum of the Hon, EastIndia Company. J. & H. Cox.

5. Description of new species and varieties of mammals found in Ceylon;Kelaart;J. Ceylon Branch R. Asiat. Soc.,1850

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