Hedgehog Species Newly Discovered, Diverged from Others Over a Million Years Ago

Hedgehog Species Newly Discovered, Diverged from Others Over a Million Years Ago

Researchers at Anhui Normal⁢ University, Wuhu, ‌China, have announced ‍the ⁣discovery ‍of⁢ a new species​ within the hedgehog genus Mesechinus. The eastern China hedgehog species was found to be distinct from other regional hedgehogs across morphological and phylogenetic characteristics.

Previously known Mesechinus species (M.⁤ dauuricus, M. hughi, M. miodon, and M. wangi) mainly inhabit northern China, Mongolia, ⁢Russia and ‌southwestern China. This new species is exclusive ‍to eastern China.

Seven‍ Mesechinus specimens were collected from eastern China between 2018 and 2023 to determine which species of hedgehog they‍ were. The researchers utilized⁣ various methodologies, including morphological‌ measurements, mitochondrial​ genome sequencing, assembly, annotation, ⁣and phylogenetic analysis using genetic data from several Mesechinus species and related hedgehog genera⁤ obtained from GenBank.

Morphological, morphometric, and genetic ‍evidence ‌supported the recognition of‌ Mesechinus orientalis as a new species, distinct from ⁤the previously recognized species within the genus Mesechinus. The new species shares morphological similarities with ‍M. hughi but is distinguishable by its smaller size, shorter spines, and specific ⁣cranial characteristics.

Divergence times were estimated from the most recent common ancestor. The genus Mesechinus began to ⁤appear‍ in the early Pleistocene ⁤around 1.71 million years ‌ago. M. orientalis was estimated to have diverged from M. hughi and M. wangi ancestor⁤ approximately 1.10 million years ago. In comparison, M. hughi and M. wangi diverged from each other about 0.74 million years ago.

2023-12-19 23:41:03
Article from phys.org ‌rnrn

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