Home Morphological and chromosomal taxonomic assessment of Sylvilagus brasiliensis gabbi (Leporidae)
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Morphological and chromosomal taxonomic assessment of Sylvilagus brasiliensis gabbi (Leporidae)

  • Luis A. Ruedas and Jorge Salazar-Bravo
Published/Copyright: September 26, 2007

Abstract

The cottontail rabbit species, Sylvilagus brasiliensis, is currently understood to be constituted by 18 subspecies ranging from east central Mexico to northern Argentina, and from sea level to at least 4800 m in altitude. This hypothesis of a single widespread polytypic species remains to be critically tested. In other species groups of Sylvilagus from other geographic areas, the use of chromosomal information has been important in delineating taxonomic boundaries. To date, however, no chromosomal data are available for Sylvilagus south of Mexico. Here we report the chromosomal complement of two individuals (a male and a female) putatively ascribed to Sylvilagus brasiliensis on the basis of morphological characters and collected from southern Península del Azuero in Panama. The diploid number (2n) of these two individuals was 38 and the fundamental number (autosomal arms, aFN) was 72. Karyotypes of S. brasiliensis from southern Mexico have reported two chromosomal forms: 2n=36, FN=68 and 2n=40, FN=76. We complement the chromosomal data with a morphological examination of the Panama specimens and of holotype materials pertinent to the taxonomic identity of Mesoamerican taxa of Sylvilagus. These findings, in association with others regarding the phylogenetic relationships of Sylvilagus from the Neotropics, reinforce the idea that the current taxonomic treatment of the species merits critical scrutiny. In particular, we excise Sylvilagus gabbi from subspecific synonymy with S. brasiliensis and remove the subspecies truei from brasiliensis to gabbi.


Corresponding author.

Published Online: 2007-09-26
Published in Print: 2007-1

©2007 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Meetings
  2. Daytime cover, diet and space-use of golden jackals (Canis aureus) in agro-ecosystems of Bangladesh
  3. Utilisation of woody plants for lodge construction by European beaver (Castor fiber) in the Loire valley, France
  4. The importance of ponds for the otter (Lutra lutra) during drought periods in Mediterranean ecosystems: A case study in Bergantes River
  5. The odors of predators influence the behavior of the silky pocket mouse, Perognathus flavus (Rodentia)
  6. Use of space by the four-toed elephant-shrew Petrodromus tetradactylus (Macroscelidae) in Kwazulu-Natal (South Africa)
  7. Mammal survey on Phu Quoc Island, southern Vietnam
  8. Checklist of mammals of the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania
  9. Morphological and morphometric analyses of dental and cranial characters in Apodemus hyrcanicus and A. witherbyi (Rodentia: Muridae) from Iran
  10. Morphological and chromosomal taxonomic assessment of Sylvilagus brasiliensis gabbi (Leporidae)
  11. Status of the African bats Vesperugo grandidieri Dobson 1876 and Vesperugo flavescens Seabra 1900 (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), with description of a new subgenus
  12. Banded together: a review of the factors favouring group living in a social carnivore, the banded mongoose Mungos mungo (Carnivora: Herpestidae)
  13. Residues of DDT and other organochlorines in small mammals from Central Portugal
  14. Roosting behaviour of the greater noctule Nyctalus lasiopterus Schreber, 1780 (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae) in Hungary as revealed by radio-tracking
  15. Population size, density and conservation status of the grizzled giant squirrel in Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary, India
  16. Abnormal and supernumerary teeth in the dentition of a greater Egyptian jerboa Jaculus orientalis (Dipodoidea, Rodentia)
  17. A live trap model for subterranean mole rats
  18. Book reviews
Downloaded on 15.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/MAMM.2007.011/html
Scroll to top button