4.5 Article

Revalidation and expanded description of Mustela aistoodonnivalis (Mustelidae: Carnivora) based on a multigene phylogeny and morphology

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9944

Keywords

geometric morphometric; Mustela aistoodonnivalis; Mustela erminea; Mustela nivalis; phylogeny; second lower molar

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The lacked-teeth pygmy weasel, originally considered a subspecies or synonym of Mustela nivalis, has been confirmed as an independent species through morphological and genetic analysis.
The lacked-teeth pygmy weasel, Mustela aistoodonnivalis Wu & Kao, 1991, was originally described as being from Taibai Mountain and Zhashui county, Shaanxi, China. Subsequently, it was considered a subspecies or synonym of Mustela nivalis. In a faunal survey of northwestern Sichuan, eight specimens of M. aistoodonnivalis were collected. A molecular phylogenetic analysis of one mitochondrial and six nuclear genes clustered the specimens as a distinct clade and not with M. nivalis. Morphologically, the lack of the second lower molar differentiated them from M. nivalis, and genetic distances were typical of discrete species. These analyses confirmed that M. aistoodonnivalis is an independent species in the genus Mustela.

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