Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern India

A study to understand diversity and changes in non-volant small mammal composition in the Western Ghats of Coorg District, Karnataka was conducted from April 2004 to April 2008. A total of 11060 trap nights of sampling in various habitats such as forest fragments, coffee and cardamom plantations, o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. Molur, M. Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wildlife Information Liaison Development Society 2009-12-01
Series:Journal of Threatened Taxa
Online Access:http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/452
id doaj-99d217cecab646c7ba6c5b3b5a4d5b65
record_format Article
spelling doaj-99d217cecab646c7ba6c5b3b5a4d5b652020-11-25T02:20:52ZengWildlife Information Liaison Development SocietyJournal of Threatened Taxa0974-78930974-79072009-12-0111258960810.11609/JoTT.o2330.589-608438Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern IndiaS. MolurM. SinghA study to understand diversity and changes in non-volant small mammal composition in the Western Ghats of Coorg District, Karnataka was conducted from April 2004 to April 2008. A total of 11060 trap nights of sampling in various habitats such as forest fragments, coffee and cardamom plantations, open areas including grasslands, agricultural fields including paddy and ginger cultivations, bamboo and in and around human habitations across the two vegetation zones of the district. Totally, 14 species of non-volant small mammals were trapped as 412 unique individuals contributing to an overall trap success of 3.8%. Rattus wroughtoni was the most commonly caught taxon followed by Suncus murinus and S. niger although S. murinus was trapped in 10 habitats followed by Mus musculus in 9 of 11 habitats. The abundance of small mammals was the highest in bamboo (12.1%) and in forest fragments (7.2%); the plantations supported very low abundances (< 3.1%). Endemic mammals such as Rattus satarae, Vandeleuria nilagirica, Platacanthomys lasiurus, Funambulus tristriatus and Suncus niger were recorded in Coorg although P. lasiurus and V. nilagirica were trapped in only one habitat each. Changes in land use and rapid decline in quality of habitat is pushing the endemics into local extinctions while non-endemic commensals are displacing restricted endemics in disturbed habitats. This study underlines the need for more in-depth rapid assessments in the Western Ghats for the poorly understood small mammals and the initiation of conservation programmes for endemics.http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/452
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Molur
M. Singh
spellingShingle S. Molur
M. Singh
Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern India
Journal of Threatened Taxa
author_facet S. Molur
M. Singh
author_sort S. Molur
title Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern India
title_short Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern India
title_full Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern India
title_fullStr Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern India
title_full_unstemmed Non-volant small mammals of the Western Ghats of Coorg District, southern India
title_sort non-volant small mammals of the western ghats of coorg district, southern india
publisher Wildlife Information Liaison Development Society
series Journal of Threatened Taxa
issn 0974-7893
0974-7907
publishDate 2009-12-01
description A study to understand diversity and changes in non-volant small mammal composition in the Western Ghats of Coorg District, Karnataka was conducted from April 2004 to April 2008. A total of 11060 trap nights of sampling in various habitats such as forest fragments, coffee and cardamom plantations, open areas including grasslands, agricultural fields including paddy and ginger cultivations, bamboo and in and around human habitations across the two vegetation zones of the district. Totally, 14 species of non-volant small mammals were trapped as 412 unique individuals contributing to an overall trap success of 3.8%. Rattus wroughtoni was the most commonly caught taxon followed by Suncus murinus and S. niger although S. murinus was trapped in 10 habitats followed by Mus musculus in 9 of 11 habitats. The abundance of small mammals was the highest in bamboo (12.1%) and in forest fragments (7.2%); the plantations supported very low abundances (< 3.1%). Endemic mammals such as Rattus satarae, Vandeleuria nilagirica, Platacanthomys lasiurus, Funambulus tristriatus and Suncus niger were recorded in Coorg although P. lasiurus and V. nilagirica were trapped in only one habitat each. Changes in land use and rapid decline in quality of habitat is pushing the endemics into local extinctions while non-endemic commensals are displacing restricted endemics in disturbed habitats. This study underlines the need for more in-depth rapid assessments in the Western Ghats for the poorly understood small mammals and the initiation of conservation programmes for endemics.
url http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/452
work_keys_str_mv AT smolur nonvolantsmallmammalsofthewesternghatsofcoorgdistrictsouthernindia
AT msingh nonvolantsmallmammalsofthewesternghatsofcoorgdistrictsouthernindia
_version_ 1724869279522750464