Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Ndiaye A., Hima K., Dobigny Gauthier, Sow A., Dalecky Ambroise, Ba K., Thiam M., Granjon Laurent. (2014). Integrative taxonomy of a poorly known Sahelian rodent, Gerbillus nancillus (Muridae, Gerbillinae). Zoologischer Anzeiger, 253 (5), p. 430-439. ISSN 0044-5231.

Titre du document
Integrative taxonomy of a poorly known Sahelian rodent, Gerbillus nancillus (Muridae, Gerbillinae)
Année de publication
2014
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000338607600006
Auteurs
Ndiaye A., Hima K., Dobigny Gauthier, Sow A., Dalecky Ambroise, Ba K., Thiam M., Granjon Laurent
Source
Zoologischer Anzeiger, 2014, 253 (5), p. 430-439 ISSN 0044-5231
Aridification processes that affected the Sahelian area of West Africa during the last decades have induced significant changes in plant and animal communities of this region. In rodents, the genus Gerbillus characteristic of North African and Asian arid habitats has been affected by this climatic and environmental trends. Several species of this genus showed a southward range expansion in recent years into the Sahelian bioclimatic zone. Recent sampling in several localities of West Africa (Mali, Niger and Senegal) enabled us to collect numerous specimens of small gerbils. An integrative study of these samples using molecular, morphological and cytogenetical methods revealed that many of them were attributable to Gerbillus nancillus, a secretive and poorly known species. Gerbillus nancillus appears characterized by a well differentiated karyotype with 2n = 56 chromosomes, and to represent a unique genetic lineage within this genus. Body and skull measurements of G. nancillus were compared with those of the morphologically similar Gerbillus henleyi, which provided diagnostic clues between them. These new data significantly expand the distribution area of G. nancillus, which now ranges from Sudan in the East to Senegal in the West. G. nancillus is here reported from numerous new localities in Niger and Mali, and for the first time in Senegal, which raises questions about the origin of its presence and the colonization routes it followed to get there. We also show that G. henleyi and G. nancillus are sympatric and apparently often syntopic in the sub-Saharan part of the distribution of G. henleyi.
Plan de classement
Sciences du monde animal [080]
Description Géographique
MALI ; NIGER ; SENEGAL ; ZONE SAHELIENNE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010062374]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010062374
Contact