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Kabupaten Nias Selatan

Badan Riset dan Inovasi Nasional

Informasi Dataset

07-11-2022

13-08-2024

e8d3e635-0989-40c6-88ad-f3269a9fccb0

Dataset Serupa
A new species of fruit bat (Megachiroptera: Pteropodidae: Thoopterus) from Sulaw...

A new species of fruit bat in the genus Thoopterus, T. suhaniahae, is described ...

A Colourful New Species Of Myzomela Honeyeater From Rote Island In Eastern Indon...

The avifauna of Rote Island in the Lesser Sundas is not well studied and general...

A Colourful New Species Of Myzomela Honeyeater From Rote Island In Eastern Indon...

The avifauna of Rote Island in the Lesser Sundas is not well studied and general...

A New Species of Muscicapa Flycatcher from Sulawesi, Indonesia

The Indonesian island of Sulawesi, a globally important hotspot of avian endemis...

A New Species of Schizostachyum (Poaceae-Bambusoideae) From Sumba Island, Indone...

A new species of Schizostachyum (Poaceae: Bambusoideae) from Sumba Island, Indon...

INFORMASI: Data berikut ini masih dalam proses pemenuhan Prinsip SDI.

Convergent Evolution Of Aquatic Foraging In A New Genus And Species (Rodentia: Muridae) From Sulawesi Island, Indonesia

Terbatas

The island of Sulawesi, in Indonesia, lies at the crossroads of the Indo-Australian Archipelago and has remained isolated from the Asian (Sunda) and Australian (Sahul) continental shelves for at least the last 10 million years. Of the 50 native species of rodents on Sulawesi, all are endemic and represent the evolution of a variety of ecological and morphological forms within the Muridae and Sciuridae. Carnivorous rodents have evolved, perhaps independently, in Muridae from the Philippines, Sulawesi, and Sahul, but semi-aquatic murids are only known from Sahul. Here we describe a new genus and species of insectivorous water rat from Sulawesi. Phylogenetic analyses demonstrate that it is related to the shrew rats of Sulawesi and represents an origin of aquatic carnivory that is independent from the evolution of water rats on Sahul. Many areas of Sulawesi have not been surveyed systematically and current lists of mammal species are likely to dramatically underestimate actual diversity. Zootaxa, Vol. 3816 No. 4. 2014. P: 541-564. ISSN: 1175-5326

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