Introduction
We recently published the diagnosis and the name of a new mammal species: Talpa aquitania Nicolas, Martínez-Vargas et Hugot 2015. Unfortunately, it happened that the editors of the Bulletin de l’Académie Vétérinaire de France, the selected journal, decided to stop the paper edition for their publication. An attentive examination of the corresponding articles of the International Code on Zoological Nomenclature (Art. 8) shows that, to be valid, a new name must be published on a paper support or electronically after being pre-registered in the Official Register of Zoological Nomenclature (ZooBank) before publication. Thus, in this situation we have a risk that our work will not be considered published, and therefore our new taxon considered not available. This is the reason why we publish the present article in a periodical printed on paper, distributed simultaneously to all subscribers and accessible online after its paper distribution, which makes our new name available under the traditional rules of zoological nomenclature. In the following we are giving the essentials of the diagnosis of the new taxon. For the details of the molecular phylogenetic, morphological and biogeographical information, we refer to our previous original works (Nicolas et al. 2015, 2017).
Talpa aquitania
Holotype
MNHN-ZM-2016-471 (VN1789). Collected in 2013. France-86280, Saint-Benoît, 46.546°N-0.348°W. Adult female: whole body preserved in ethanol.
Paratypes
Tissues preserved in ethanol and RnaLater; skulls extracted (national collection number, field number, date of collect, locality and district of collection, geographic coordinates, name of collector, age and sex). MNHN-ZM-2016-472 (YA0346). 06/10/2013, France-63320, Creste, Issoire, 45.550°N-3.043°W, Bernard Pradier, adult female. MNHN-ZM-2016-473 (YA0386). 13/04/2014, France-63190, Lezoux, alt. 833 m, 45.828°N-3.380°W, J-Michel Georgeon, adult female.
Diagnosis and distribution
Talpa aquitania can unambiguously be distinguished from its sister-related species, Talpa europaea Linnaeus 1758 and Talpa occidentalis Cabrera 1907, by a unique combination of characters: The eyelids are fused together. As observed in Talpa occidentalis, the eye is completely covered by membranes. This characteristic differs from what is observed in Talpa europaea, which has open eyes.
Weight, head, body and hind-foot lengths are significantly greater in Talpa aquitania (weight: 89±17 g, head and body: 149±7 mm, foot: 21.5±1.5 mm) than in Talpa europaea and Talpa occidentalis (Nicolas et al. 2015).
The mesostyle of the upper first molar (M1) is simple in Talpa aquitania and Talpa europaea, while it is double in Talpa occidentalis. In T. occidentalis and T. europaea, the mesostyles of the upper second molar (M2) and the upper third molar (M3) are divided into two cusps. The two cusps are of subequal size, and they are aligned on a plane that extends parallel to the parastyle and the metastyle. Some T. aquitania specimens have a simple mesostyle in M2, and other specimens show an additional minute cusp. Unlike in T. europaea and T. occidentalis, this cusp is much smaller than the main cusp of the mesostyle and is located in the crest that connects the mesostyle to the metacone of M2 that is in a more lingual position than the mesostyle itself. In the M3 of some T. aquitania specimens, the mesostyle is composed of a main anterior cusp and a slightly smaller posterior cusp (see figure 4 in Nicolas et al. 2015, figure 6 in Nicolas et al. 2017). In other specimens, this posterior cusp is not clearly discernible because its posterior border is fused to the crest that runs from the mesostyle to the metacone of M3. Despite interindividual variability, the mesostyle condition of M2 and M3 of T. aquitania specimens differs from that found in T. europaea and T. occidentalis.
Base composition of 16 positions of the cytochrome b gene differ between Talpa aquitania and the two other species (based on 216 specimens of Talpa europaea, 118 specimens of T. aquitania and 26 specimens of Talpa occidentalis; Nicolas et al. 2017). Base composition at positions 87, 171, 176, 282, 309, 328, 351, 369, 465, 492, 745, 813, 828, 981, 1047 and 1074 is C, G, C, G, T, T, A, A, T, C, T, G, C, A, T, T in T. aquitania, and it is A, A, T, A, C, A, G, G, C, T, C, A, T, T, C, C in both T. europaea and T. occidentalis.
Talpa aquitania is present in France southward and westward of the Loire River, and in Northern Spain.
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to Philippe Bouchet and Alain Dubois who drew our attention to this issue related to the code of nomenclature.
References
Anonymous [International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature]. 2012. Amendment of Articles 8, 9, 10, 21 and 78 of the International Code of Zoological nomenclature to expand and refine methods of publication. Bull. Zool. Nom. 69: 161–169.10.21805/bzn.v69i3.a8.161Search in Google Scholar
Nicolas, V., J. Martínez-Vargas, J.-P. Hugot. 2015. Talpa aquitania nov. sp. (Talpidae, Soricomorpha) a new mole species from southwest France and north Spain. Bull. Acad. Vet. Fr. 168: 329–334.10.4267/2042/58283Search in Google Scholar
Nicolas, V., J. Martínez-Vargas, J.-P. Hugot. 2017. Molecular data and ecological niche modelling reveal the evolutionary history of the common and Iberian moles (Talpidae) in Europe. Zool. Scripta 46: 12–26.10.1111/zsc.12189Search in Google Scholar
©2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Original Studies
- Wolves and wild ungulates in the Ligurian Alps (Western Italy): prey selection and spatial-temporal interactions
- The brown bear Ursus arctos population in Lar Wildlife Refuge, northern Iran
- Postnatal cranial growth of Risso’s dolphin (Grampus griseus)
- Bat fauna associated with artificial ponds in La Malinche National Park, a mountain ecosystem of Mexico
- New insight into the cradle of the grey voles (subgenus Microtus) inferred from mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences
- Anomalous coat colour in the fat dormouse (Glis glis): a review with new records
- Short Notes
- First study on food habits of anteaters, Myrmecophaga tridactyla and Tamandua tetradactyla, at the southern limit of their distribution
- First record and phylogenetic position of Myotis indochinensis (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae) from China
- New records of bats from southern Morocco (Atlantic Sahara) and notes on echolocation
- New records of hypopigmentation in two neotropical phyllostomid bat species with different roosting habits (Urodermabilobatum, Glossophaga soricina)
- New data on the endemic cricetid rodent Holochilus lagigliai from central-western Argentina: fossil record and potential distribution
- Far away from the endemism area: first record of the Ecuador fish-eating rat Anotomys leander (Cricetidae: Sigmodontinae) in the Colombian Andes
- New records and phylogenetic position of Neusticomys ferreirai (Rodentia: Cricetidae) Percequillo, Carmignoto and Silva, 2005 from the Amazon basin, northern Brazil
- Commentary
- Talpa aquitania sp. nov. (Talpidae, Soricomorpha), a new mole species from SW France and N Spain
- Annual Reviewer Acknowledgement
- Reviewer acknowledgement Mammalia volume 81 (2017)
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Original Studies
- Wolves and wild ungulates in the Ligurian Alps (Western Italy): prey selection and spatial-temporal interactions
- The brown bear Ursus arctos population in Lar Wildlife Refuge, northern Iran
- Postnatal cranial growth of Risso’s dolphin (Grampus griseus)
- Bat fauna associated with artificial ponds in La Malinche National Park, a mountain ecosystem of Mexico
- New insight into the cradle of the grey voles (subgenus Microtus) inferred from mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences
- Anomalous coat colour in the fat dormouse (Glis glis): a review with new records
- Short Notes
- First study on food habits of anteaters, Myrmecophaga tridactyla and Tamandua tetradactyla, at the southern limit of their distribution
- First record and phylogenetic position of Myotis indochinensis (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae) from China
- New records of bats from southern Morocco (Atlantic Sahara) and notes on echolocation
- New records of hypopigmentation in two neotropical phyllostomid bat species with different roosting habits (Urodermabilobatum, Glossophaga soricina)
- New data on the endemic cricetid rodent Holochilus lagigliai from central-western Argentina: fossil record and potential distribution
- Far away from the endemism area: first record of the Ecuador fish-eating rat Anotomys leander (Cricetidae: Sigmodontinae) in the Colombian Andes
- New records and phylogenetic position of Neusticomys ferreirai (Rodentia: Cricetidae) Percequillo, Carmignoto and Silva, 2005 from the Amazon basin, northern Brazil
- Commentary
- Talpa aquitania sp. nov. (Talpidae, Soricomorpha), a new mole species from SW France and N Spain
- Annual Reviewer Acknowledgement
- Reviewer acknowledgement Mammalia volume 81 (2017)