Brown-tailed mongoose explained

The brown-tailed mongoose, brown-tailed vontsira, Malagasy brown-tailed mongoose, or salano (Salanoia concolor) is a species of mammal in the family Eupleridae. It is endemic to Madagascar. Its natural habitat is moist lowland tropical forest. It is threatened by habitat loss.

Taxonomy

The brown-tailed mongoose was first described in 1837 by French zoologist Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire under the names Galidia unicolor and Galidia olivacea. He placed both in the genus Galidia, together with the ring-tailed mongoose (Galidia elegans),[1] which is now recognized as the only species of that genus.[2] However, the name unicolor had been a misprint for concolor, and the name was corrected in an erratum and in a later note by Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire.[3] In 1865, John Edward Gray placed concolor and olivacea in their own subgenus of Galidia, which he called Salanoia.[4] In 1882, St. George Jackson Mivart also separated olivacea and concolor from Galidia, and placed them in a separate genus Hemigalidia, without mentioning Salanoia.[5] In his 1904 Index generum mammalium, Palmer noted that Salanoia, the first name to be published, was the proper name for the genus.[6] Although Glover Morrill Allen, in 1939, still listed two species, which he called Salanoia olivacea and S. unicolor,[7] by 1972 R. Albignac recognized a single species only, which he called Salanoia concolor.[8] A second species of Salanoia, Salanoia durrelli, was described in 2010.[9]

Literature cited

Notes and References

  1. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1837, p. 581
  2. Wozencraft, 2005, pp. 560–561
  3. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1839, p. 37
  4. Gray, 1865, p. 523; Allen, 1939, p. 226
  5. Mivart, 1882, p. 188
  6. Palmer, 1904, pp. 317, 617
  7. Allen, 1939, p. 228
  8. Albignac, 1972, p. 677
  9. Durbin et al., 2010