2024-03-29T00:11:50Zhttp://digital.csic.es/dspace-oai/requestoai:digital.csic.es:10261/442182016-02-17T07:09:43Zcom_10261_77com_10261_8col_10261_330
2012-01-12T17:55:35Z
urn:hdl:10261/44218
Systematics and phylogeny of the cane rats (Rodentia: Thryonomyidae)
López-Antoñanzas, Raquel
Sevket Sen
Mein, Pierre
Cladistics
Eocene
Miocene
Oligocene
Phylogenetic definition
Pliocene
Quaternary
The family Thryonomyidae is known from the Eocene up to the present. Today, this group comprises just two closely related species, which are restricted to sub-Saharan Africa. However, various thryonomyids have been recorded in strata of Miocene age, when the group spread out of Africa eastward to southern Asia (Pakistan). A systematic revision and a cladistic analysis shows that 20 species can be referred to this family: Thryonomys swinderianus (Temninck), T. gregorianus (Thomas), Paraphiomys pigotti Andrews, P. occidentalis Lavocat, P. simonsi Wood, P. hopwoodi Lavocat, P. shipmani Denys et Jaeger, P. australis Mein, Pickford et Senut, P. roessneri Mein, Pickford et Senut, P. afarensis Geraads, Paraphiomys sp. nov. from Saudi Arabia López-Antoñanzas et Sen, P. renelavocati sp. nov., Neosciuromys africanus Stromer, Apodecter stromeri Hopwood, Paraulacodus indicus Hinton, Paraulacodus johanesi Jaeger, Michaux et Sabatier, Gaudeamus aegyptius Wood, Epiphiomys coryndoni Lavocat, Kochalia geespei (de Bruijn et Hussain), Paraphiomys sp. nov. from Saudi Arabia, and Paraphiomys orangeus Mein et Pickford. The unresolved basal position of Sacaresia moyaeponsi with respect to Metaphiomys schaubi and the clade comprising the above-cited species, suggest that this taxon should not be allocated to the family Thryonomyidae. A phylogenetic definition of the family Thryonomyidae is proposed as an outcome of the phylogenetic analysis: Epiphiomys corindoni, Thryonomys swinderianus, their most recent common ancestor and all its descendants (node-based taxon).
2012-01-12T17:55:35Z
2012-01-12T17:55:35Z
2004-06
artículo
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 142(3): 423-444
0024-4082
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/44218
10.1111/j.1096-3642.2004.00136.x
eng
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2004.00136.x/full
closedAccess
Wiley-Blackwell