Complex-toothed flying squirrel

Complex-toothed flying squirrel
Temporal range: Early Pleistocene to Recent
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Sciuridae
Tribe: Pteromyini
Genus: Trogopterus
Heude, 1898
Species: T. xanthipes
Binomial name
Trogopterus xanthipes
(Milne-Edwards, 1876)

The complex-toothed flying squirrel (Trogopterus xanthipes) occurs in the southern Chinese provinces Hubei, Hunan, Guizhou, Sichuan, and Yunnan. The common name refers to the teeth, which differ from those of other species of flying squirrels.

Description

Trogopterus xanthipes looks much like other flying squirrels, but with a characteristic tuft of black hair below the base of the ear. The fur is generally grey-brown, but white beneath. There is a slight reddish tinge to the face and the tail. The overall length is about 60 cm, of which the tail is about half.

Conservation

The conservation status of the complex-toothed flying squirrel is near threatened because the population is shrinking as a result of habitat loss and excessive hunting for food and traditional Chinese medicine.[1]

Biology and Reproduction

T. xanthipes builds its nests in cliffs, usually around 30 m above the ground. They live in mountainous terrain in altitudes of 1300 to 1500 m above sea level, or even up to 2750 m according to some sources. Their activity pattern is nocturnal; they leave their nests at night to search for food such as nuts, fruits, and leaves. They become sexually mature at about 22 months. A litter may comprise up to four young, and gestation lasts for roughly 80 to 90 days.[1] Captive specimens have been reported to live for ten to twelve years.[2]

Taxonomy

Though five species of the genus Trogopterus have been described, current opinion favours including them all in the same species: Trogopterus xanthipes. The hairy-footed flying squirrel (Belomys pearsoni) is closely related, and may be added to the genus Trogopterus.[3]

Medical and commercial interest

The species is collected as a meat animal, and also is captured for collection of the fecal matter, which is valued in traditional Chinese medicine as "five spirits grease" (五靈脂, wǔ líng zhī). It is used in the treatment of ulcers in the duodenum. Recent research has attempted to establish whether the fecal matter includes components of possible medical interest. Antithrombotic flavonoids have been reported.[4] Various diterpenoids, both known and unknown, have been evaluated for cytotoxicity against human tumor cell lines,[5] and so have various neolignans classed as trogopterins. Although none of the compounds showed clinically significant activity against important tumor cell lines, some did produce detectable cytotoxic effects, suggesting a source of lignans with cytotoxic activity.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Smith, A.T. & Johnston, C.H. 2008. Trogopterus xanthipes. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008: e.T22297A9369610. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T22297A9369610.en. Downloaded on 29 May 2016.
  2. Nowak, Ronald. Walker's Mammals of the World. Johns Hopkins University Press 1999.
  3. Stephen Matthew Jackson; Peter Schouten (2012). Gliding Mammals of the World. Csiro Publishing. pp. 186–. ISBN 978-0-643-09260-0.
  4. Yang NY1, Tao WW; Duan, JA (Nov 2010). "Antithrombotic flavonoids from the faeces of Trogopterus xanthipes". Nat Prod Res. 24 (19): 1843–9. doi:10.1080/14786419.2010.482057.
  5. Zhao, Jun; Zhu, Hua-Jie; Zhou, Xiao-Jiang; Yang, Tong-Hua; Wang, Yuan-Yuan; Su, Jia; Li, Yan; Cheng, Yong-Xian (2010). "Diterpenoids from the Feces of Trogopterus xanthipes". J. Nat. Prod. 73 (5): 865–869. doi:10.1021/np900814s.
  6. Baek, Soyoon; Xia, Xuikui; Sun Min, Byung; Park, Chanil (2014). "Trogopterins A–C: Three new neolignans from feces of Trogopterus xanthipes". Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 10: 2955–2962. doi:10.3762/bjoc.10.313.
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