Three new shrews (Soricidae: Crocidura) from West Sumatra, Indonesia: elevational and morphological divergence in syntopic sister taxa

Author:

Nations Jonathan A1ORCID,Handika Heru1,Mursyid Ahmad2,Darma Busta Ryski2,Apandi 3,Achmadi Anang S4,Esselstyn Jacob A1

Affiliation:

1. Museum of Natural Science and Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University , Baton Rouge, LA 70803 , United States

2. Department of Biology, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Andalas University , Padang, Sumatera Barat 25163 , Indonesia

3. Directorate of Scientific Collection Management, Deputy of Infrastructure Research and Innovation, National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) , Cibinong, Jawa Barat 16911 , Indonesia

4. Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense, Research Center for Ecology and Ethnobiology, National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) , Cibinong, Jawa Barat 16911 , Indonesia

Abstract

Abstract We describe 3 new species of shrews (Eulipotyphla, Soricidae, Crocidura) from West Sumatra, Indonesia. Two of these taxa were found above 1,800 m on Mt. Singgalang. The third taxon was found above 1,660 m on Mt. Talamau, 65 km northwest of Mt. Singgalang. We also resurrect Crocidura aequicauda based on 2 specimens from Mts. Tujuh and Kerinci, which lie near the border between West Sumatra and Jambi provinces. Several methodological approaches support our findings: linear cranial morphometrics, landmark-based 2D geometric morphometrics, and molecular phylogenetics using both mtDNA and 6 nuclear exons. A multilocus species-tree analysis places the 3 new species and C. aequicauda in a clade with the Javan endemics C. monticola and C. umbra. Although the 2 taxa from Mt. Singgalang are recovered as sister species, 1 is nearly twice the size of the other, and they are divergent in several other morphological characters, such as tail length, cranium size, and pelage color and texture. Recently diverged yet morphologically disparate sister taxa living syntopically in an isolated habitat “island,” like the montane forests of Mt. Singgalang, is unusual in mammals but documented in other Crocidura on neighboring Java and Borneo; these 2 new taxa represent the first known case of this phenomenon on Sumatra. Our results bring the number of Sumatran Crocidura to 10, 9 of which are endemic to the island. All 3 of the new species appear to be endemic to a single mountain and were not detected in similar surveys of nearby mountains. If this local endemism pattern is common, it would indicate that Sumatra’s mammal diversity may be severely underestimated, largely due to the paucity of small-mammal surveys and museum specimens.

Funder

National Science Foundation

American Society of Mammalogists Fellowship

American Society of Mammalogists Jim Patton Award

Alfred L. Gardner and Mark S. Hafner Mammalogy Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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