Resumen
The genus Cryptotis comprises 53 species, 18 of them known from South America, most belonging to the Cryptotis “thomasi” group. Recent discoveries suggest that its diversity remains unknown. In South America, one of the less studied regions for Cryptotis is southern Ecuador and northern Peru. A recent collection of two undetermined shrews from Zamora Chinchipe Province, southern Ecuador, which presented distinct morphology from the known Ecuadorian species for Ecuador, determined here as Cryptotis sp. “Ecuador”, led us to perform a review of Cryptotis from Ecuador and Peru, including a preliminary taxonomic revision of the “thomasi” group. An integrative approach using morphological analyses and molecular phylogenies based on two mitochondrial genes (CYTB and COI) confirmed that the “thomasi” group is monophyletic and that the specimens of Cryptotis sp. “Ecuador” are distinct from its congeners, representing a new species, with a genetic distance of 8 % from its closest congeners. Furthermore, we found that the currently recognized Peruvian species Cryptotis evaristoi, Cryptotis peruviensis, and C. “montivagus” (sensu Zeballos, H., Pino, K., Medina, C.E., Pari, A., Chávez, D., Tinoco, N., and Ceballos, G. (2018). A new species of small-eared shrew of the genus Cryptotis (Mammalia, Eulipotyphla, Soricidae) from the northernmost Peruvian Andes. Zootaxa 4377: 51–73) are reciprocally monophyletic, but showing low genetic distances (0.77–1.83 %) and high morphological similarity. This finding suggests the possibility they might represent variations of C. peruviensis (oldest available name) rather than distinct species.
Idioma original | Inglés |
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Publicación | Mammalia |
Volumen | 2025 |
DOI | |
Estado | Publicada - 7 may. 2025 |
Nota bibliográfica
Publisher Copyright:© 2025 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.
Financiación
Research funding: The Fundaci\u00F3n Ecociencia channelized the scholar grants called Ecofondos from a statal oil company and financed the resources required for the field investigation.The Museo de Zoolog\u00EDa de la Pontificia Universidad Cat\u00F3lica del Ecuador, the Instituto de Ciencias Biol\u00F3gicas de la Escuela Polit\u00E9cnica Nacional del Ecuador (EPN) took care of the logistics to assure all investigative activities had a positive impact. This research was partially supported by the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (RR no. 2020\u201301686 and project number B20100321, RR no. 2021\u201305753, and project number B21100031).
Financiadores | Número del financiador |
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Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos | 2020–01686, B20100321, B21100031, 2021–05753 |
Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador |