Distribution and identity of species in the Antechinus stuartii–A. flavipes group (Marsupialia : Dasyuridae) in south-eastern Australia
J. Sumner and C. R. Dickman
Australian Journal of Zoology 46(1) 27 - 41
Abstract
This study describes genetical differences between three morphologically
similar species of Antechinus in south-eastern
Australia, and uses the climatic model BIOCLIM to clarify their expected
geographical distributions. Allozyme electrophoresis revealed Nei’s
distances of >0.2 between A. flavipes and
A. stuartii and A. flavipes and
A. agilis, the latter a newly recognised species in
south-eastern Australia. Fixed allele differences were determined in five
proteins between A. stuartii and
A. flavipes from an area of sympatry in northern New
South Wales, confirming their genetic distinctness. A smaller distance (0.08)
separated A. stuartii from
A. agilis, but fixed allele differences in albumin and
mannose phosphate isomerase distinguished these species clearly. Locality
records for the three species were compiled from the electrophoretic results,
museum specimen records and published data, and used to generate expected
distributions for each species. A. flavipes is predicted
to occur primarily in warm, inland areas of south- eastern Australia with a
mean annual rainfall of 785 mm, but to occur along the coast in South
Australia and southern Queensland. In contrast, the distributions of
A. stuartii and A. agilis are
predicted to be broadly coastal, with the former occurring in northern New
South Wales and southern Queensland in areas with high mean annual rainfall
(1430 mm) and temperature (16.0°C), the latter in southern New South Wales
and Victoria in cooler areas (11.8°C annual mean) with intermediate
rainfall (1071 mm). Sympatry appears to be limited between
A. flavipes and its two congeners;
A. stuartii and A. agilis are
predicted to be parapatric with only two small areas of overlap being evident.
Full text doi:10.1071/ZO94055
© CSIRO 1998





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