Rusty-spotted genet
Template:Short description Template:Speciesbox
The rusty-spotted genet (Genetta maculata),[1] also called panther genet and large-spotted genet, is a genet that is widely distributed in sub-Saharan Africa. It is considered common and therefore listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.[2]
Characteristics
The rusty-spotted genet has short whitish grey to pale yellow coloured fur with dark spots and a continuous dark line across the back. The spots of the upper two dorsal rows are round or square, brown in the center and darker outside. In head-to-body length it ranges from Template:Convert. Its Template:Convert long tail is ringed and has a dark tip. Its feet are of the same colour as the fur. It weighs from Template:Convert.[3]
Behaviour and ecology
Research in southeastern Nigeria revealed that the rusty-spotted genet has an omnivorous diet. It feeds on rodents like giant pouched rats (Cricetomys), Nigerian shrew (Crocidura nigeriae), Temminck's mouse (Mus musculoides), Tullberg's soft-furred mouse (Praomys tulbergi), Peters's striped mouse (Hybomys univittatus), typical striped grass mouse (Lemniscomys striatus), red-eyed dove (Streptopelia semitorquata), common agama (Agama agama), Mabuya skinks, Myriapoda, spiders, Orthoptera and Coleoptera as well as eggs, fruits, berries and seeds.[4]
Taxonomy
In 1830, John Edward Gray first described a rusty-spotted genet using the name Viverra maculata based on a zoological specimen that lived in the menagerie at the Tower of London.[5] In the 19th and 20th centuries, several taxonomists proposed the following species and subspecies for specimens obtained by natural history museums:[1] Template:Div col
- fieldiana Du Chaillu, 1860[6]
- aequatorialis Heuglin, 1866[7]
- erlangeri, gleimi, schraderi, stuhlmanni, suahelica, zambesiana Matschie, 1902[8]
- matschiei Neumann, 1902[9]
- pumila Hollister, 1916[10]
- insularis Cabrera, 1921[11]
- rubiginosa zuluensis Roberts, 1924[12]
- soror Schwarz, 1929[13]
- rubiginosa albiventris Roberts, 1932[14]
- deorum Funaioli and Simonetta, 1960[15]
- pardina schoutedeni Crawford-Cabral, 1970[16]
Genetta letabae (Thomas and Schwann, 1906),[17] formerly considered a subspecies, is now thought to be a separate species.[18]
References
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