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Detalles Bibliográficos
Main Authors: Don E. Wilson, Russell A. Mittermeier, Thomas E. Lacher, Jr
Formato: Recurso digital
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Publicado: Zenodo 2017
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Acceso en liña:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6835796
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Table of Contents:
  • <p><b>14.</b></p><p><b>Wilson's Spiny Mouse</b></p><p><b><i>Acomys wilsoni</i></b></p><p><b><b>French:</b> Acomys de Wilson / <b>German:</b> Wilson-Stachelmaus / <b>Spanish:</b> Raton espinoso de Wilson</b></p><p><b>Taxonomy.</b> Acomys wilson: Thomas, 1892,</p><p>Mombasa, Kenya.</p><p>Acomys wilsoni was formerly included in the A. subspinosus species group, and then genetic and molecular analyses found it to be a valid species, closely related to A. percivali. R. Matthey in 1968 found a chromosomal complement of 2n = 60 and FN = 76, and C. Fadda and colleagues in 2001 and M. Corti and colleagues in 2005 found 2n = 62 and FN = 76. The most recent molecular phylogeny revealed high diversity in Tanzania, and W. N. Verheyen and colleagues in 2011 found that A. wilson: is probably a species complex based upon mtDNA sequences (cytochrome-b). Five subspecies recognized.</p><p><b>Subspecies and Distribution.</b></p><p>A. A.w.wilsoniThomas,1892—knownonlyfromthetypelocalityincoastalS Kenya. A. A.w.ablutusDollman,1911—NyamaNyango,NEwaso Ng’iroRiver,Kenya.</p><p>A. A.w.argillaceusHinton&Kershaw,1920—SSouthSudan.</p><p>A. A.w.enidSt.Leger,1932—NUganda. A. A.w. nubilus Dollman, 1914 — known only from the type locality in SW Kenya.</p><p>A.w. present in S Ethiopia, S Somalia, and N Tanzania, but subspecies involved not known.</p><p><b>Descriptive notes.</b> Head—body 89-114 mm, tail 65-100 mm, ear 14-16 mm, hindfoot 14-16 mm; weight 22-47 g. Wilson's Spiny Mouse is very small, with short and broad feet, orange-rufous pelage with black dominant on head and nape, and belly white. Tail is slender and ¢.94% of head-body length.</p><p><b>Habitat.</b> Riverine areas with trees and plateaus of the Omo River in southern Ethiopia; “kopjes” (isolated rock ridges) shared with Percival’s Spiny Mouse (A. percivali) in central Kenya; and dense shrubby vegetation and sometimes houses in Kenya.</p><p><b>Food and Feeding.</b> Wilson's Spiny Mouse is omnivorous; diets are dominated by insects and vary seasonally. In dry seasons, arthropods represent 60-95% of diets, followed by seeds (5—40%) and stems and leaves. During wetter seasons, vegetation in diets increases slightly and arthropods decrease.</p><p><b>Breeding.</b> Pregnant Wilson’s Spiny Mice have been reported throughout the year. Each female canhave 7-9 litters/year and produce an average of 17-4 young/year. Gestation lasts 4-6 weeks, and litter size averages two young. Numbers of embryos are 1-4/female. Young are precocious at birth, weigh 3-4 g, and reach adult size at 17 g.</p><p><b>Activity patterns.</b> Wilson's Spiny Mouse is nocturnal and an excellent climber; it might be arboreal to scansorial.</p><p><b>Movements, Home range and Social organization.</b> In captivity, Wilson’s Spiny Mice are not aggressive, even at high density. Adults have widely overlapping home ranges.</p><p><b>Status and Conservation.</b> Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. Wilson's Spiny Mouse is found in protected areas, and there are no major threats reported.</p><p><b>Bibliography.</b> Corti et al. (2005), Delany (1964), Fadda et al. (2001), Hubert (1978b), Matthey (1968), Neal (1983, 1984), Takata (2013), Verheyen et al. (2011).</p>