Morphology and stomach content of the Goldman´s diminutive woodrat Nelsonia goldmani (Cricetidae: Neotominae)

Autores/as

  • M. Ángel León-Tapia Instituto de Ecología A. C.
  • Elisa Paulina Zaragoza-Quintana Universidad Veracruzana
  • Claudia Marisol Peralta-Juárez Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana
  • Fernando A. Cervantes Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Palabras clave:

Cloud forest, Estado de México, feeding, rare species, rodentia.

Resumen

Goldman´s diminutive woodrat (Nelsonia goldmani) is an endemic rodent that inhabits the temperate and humid environments of the central highlands of Mexico. This species is considered uncommon because of the scarce and dispersed information about specimens collected across the Faja Volcanica Transmexicana. Therefore, it is crucial to generate new information about the basic biology of N. goldmani, which so much is unknown thus far. We present the morphological description of the stomach and its content from one specimen of N. goldmani. We performed a longitudinal bisection and washing of stomach from one adult male collected at the Natural Park “Las Peñas†in the municipality of Jilotepec, Estado de México, Mexico. The macroscopic structures of the stomach were described by observation in a stereoscopic microscope. The stomach content was mounted on sliders and its components were identified and photographed with an optical microscope. According to the gastric glandular epithelium distribution, N. goldmani have a bilocular-discoglandular stomach with a characteristic fornix ventricularis slightly elongated horizontally. The stomach content was composed by several plant items: epidermal tissues of steam and leaves of angiosperms, pollen of gymnosperms, spores of ferns, fungi and animal tissue like mouth appendages and legs of insects. The stomach morphology was similar to the N. neotomodon and the peromyscine Neotomodon alstoni described previously, but the flattened and elongated fornix ventricularis found in N. goldmani was distinctive. Nonetheless, this structure can vary between individuals and mainly depends of the amount of food before dissection. The plant material found in the stomach was similar to that reported in other rodents that inhabit in similar environments to the highlands of central Mexico, such as Peromyscus aztecus, P. difficilis and Reithrodontomys fulvescens.

Biografía del autor/a

M. Ángel León-Tapia, Instituto de Ecología A. C.

Laboratorio de Sistemática Filogenética, Biología Evolutiva. Estudiante de doctorado.

Elisa Paulina Zaragoza-Quintana, Universidad Veracruzana

Centro de Investigaciones Tropicales. Doctora recién egeresada

Claudia Marisol Peralta-Juárez, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana

Biología de la reproducción. Maestra en Ciencias.

Fernando A. Cervantes, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Instituto de Biología, Departamento de Zoología. Investigador SNI II y curador de la Colección Nacional de Mamíferos.

Citas

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Publicado

2018-08-30

Número

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