Title
Taxonomy of the pygmy marmoset (Cebuella Gray, 1866): Geographic variation, species delimitation, and nomenclatural notes
Date Issued
01 March 2019
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Elsevier GmbH
Abstract
We examined a recent taxonomic appraisal of Cebuella by Boubli et al. With an increased sample spanning most of the geographic range of the genus, we investigated ventral pelage variation in Cebuella to test the proposition of Boubli et al. that there were three geographically-restricted phenotypes. Additionally, we conducted a model-based species delimitation test using published cytochrome b data and verified the type localities of the available nomina. Contrary to Boubli et al., our analysis showed that ventral pelage of Cebuella varies consistently along geography, indicating the existence of two species-group taxa, not three as suggested by the former authors. The model-based species delimitation also indicated that Cebuella is composed of more than one species. The range of the two species proposed here is different than assumed by previous authors, with one taxon occurring north of middle/lower Rio Solimões and Río Napo and the other from south of these rivers. After an extensive literature review, we show that the type locality of Cebuella pygmaea can be reliably restricted to the northern margin of Rio Solimões. Consequently, the oldest available names for the two species are Cebuella pygmaea for the populations north of middle/lower Rio Solimões and Río Napo, and Cebuella niveiventris for the populations south of these rivers.
Start page
135
End page
142
Volume
95
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Genética, Herencia
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85054180302
Source
Mammalian Biology
ISSN of the container
16165047
Sponsor(s)
We are thankful to Victor Pacheco (MUSM), Bruce Patterson (FMNH), João Alves Oliveira and Sergio Maia Vaz (MN), Andrés Cuervo (IAvH), Luis Fabio Silveira, Mario de Vivo and Juliana Gualda (MZUSP), José de Souza e Silva Jr. (MPEG), Maria Nazareth Silva and Manoela Borges (INPA), Mariluce Messias (UNIR), and Darrin Lunde, Kristofer Helgen and Ricardo Moratelli (USNM) for allowing us to examine specimens under their care. We are also grateful to Daniela Kalthoff and Julia Stigenberg for providing photos of specimens from the Swedish Museum of Natural History, and to Luca Pozzi and an anonymous referee for comments and suggestions on this manuscript. This work was funded by the Brazilian federal agency for support and evaluation of graduate education (CAPES) and the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) .
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus