Cuban solenodon

Species of mammal

Cuban solenodon[1]
Specimen at the Bronx Zoo, 1913
Conservation status

Endangered  (IUCN 3.1)[2]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Eulipotyphla
Family: Solenodontidae
Genus: Atopogale
Cabrera, 1925
Species:
A. cubana
Binomial name
Atopogale cubana
(Peters, 1861)
Cuban solenodon range
Synonyms
  • Solenodon cubanus
Skeleton

The Cuban solenodon or almiquí (Atopogale cubana) is a small, furry, shrew-like mammal endemic to mountainous forests on Cuba. It is the only species in the genus Atopogale. An elusive animal, it lives in burrows and is only active at night when it uses its unusual toxic saliva to feed on insects. The solenodons (family Solenodontidae), native to the Caribbean, are one of only a few mammals that are venomous.

The Cuban solenodon is endangered and was once considered extinct due to its rarity. It and the Hispaniolan solenodon (Solenodon paradoxus) are the only surviving solenodon species; the others are extinct.

Taxonomy

Although formerly classified in the genus Solenodon, phylogenetic evidence supports it being in its own genus, Atopogale.[3]

Rediscovery

Illustration

Since its discovery in 1861 by the German naturalist Wilhelm Peters, only 36 had ever been caught. By 1970, some thought the Cuban solenodon had become extinct, since no specimens had been found since 1890. Three were captured in 1974 and 1975, and subsequent surveys showed it still occurred in many places in central and western Oriente Province, at the eastern end of Cuba; however, it is rare everywhere. Prior to 2003, the most recent sighting was in 1999, mainly because it is a nocturnal burrower, living underground, and thus is very rarely seen. The Cuban solenodon found in 2003 was named Alejandrito. It had a mass of 24 oz (0.68 kg) and was healthy. It was released back into the wild after two days of scientific study were completed.

Appearance

With small eyes, and dark brown to black hair, the Cuban solenodon is sometimes compared to a shrew, although it most closely resembles members of the family Tenrecidae of Madagascar. It is 16–22 in (41–56 cm) long from nose to tail-tip and resembles a large brown rat with an extremely elongated snout and a long, naked, scaly tail.

Status

Willy Ley wrote in 1964 that the Cuban solenodon was, if not extinct, among "the rarest animals on earth".[4] It was declared extinct in 1970, but was rediscovered in 1974. Since 1982, it has been listed as an endangered species, in part because it only breeds a single litter of one to three in a year (leading to a long population recovery time), and because of predation by invasive species, such as small Indian mongooses, black rats, feral cats, and feral dogs. The species is also thought to be threatened by deforestation as well as habitat degradation due to logging and mining. However, there is very little conservation attention given to the species.[5]

Distribution and habitat

It is endemic to mountainous forests in the Nipe-Sagua-Baracoa mountain range of eastern Cuba, in the provinces of Holguín, Guantánamo, and Santiago de Cuba, though subfossil evidence showed it once inhabited throughout the island. It is nocturnal and travels at night along the forest floor, looking for insects and small animals on which to feed.

Behavior

This species has a varied diet. At night, they search the forest floor litter for insects and other invertebrates, fungi, and roots. They climb well and feed on fruits, berries, and buds, but have more predatory habits, too. With venom from modified salivary glands in the lower jaw, they can kill lizards, frogs, small birds, or even rodents. They seem not to be immune to the venom of their own kind, and cage mates have been reported dying after fights.

Mating

Taxidermied specimens at the Cambridge University Museum of Zoology

Cuban solenodons only meet to mate, and the male practices polygeny (i.e. mates with multiple females). The males and females are not found together unless they are mating. The pair will meet up, mate, then separate. The males do not participate in raising any of the young.

References

  1. ^ Hutterer, R. (2005). "Order Soricomorpha". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 222–223. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  2. ^ Kennerley, R.; Turvey, S.T. & Young, R. (2018). "Atopogale cubana". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T20320A22327125. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-1.RLTS.T20320A22327125.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Atopogale cubana (W. Peters, 1861)". ASM Mammal Diversity Database. American Society of Mammalogists. Retrieved 2021-07-21.
  4. ^ Ley, Willy (December 1964). "The Rarest Animals". For Your Information. Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 94–103.
  5. ^ "Cuban Solenodon". EDGE of Existence.


External links

  • Archived 2009-10-31
  • EDGE of Existence "(Cuban solenodon)" Saving the World's most Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered (EDGE) species
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  • t
  • e
Extant species of Eulipotyphla
Atelerix
  • Four-toed hedgehog (A. albiventris)
  • North African hedgehog (A. algirus)
  • Southern African hedgehog (A. frontalis)
  • Somali hedgehog (A. sclateri)
Erinaceus
  • Amur hedgehog (E. amurensis)
  • Southern white-breasted hedgehog (E. concolor)
  • West European hedgehog (E. europaeus)
  • Northern white-breasted hedgehog (E. roumanicus)
Hemiechinus
  • Long-eared hedgehog (H. auritus)
  • Indian long-eared hedgehog (H. collaris)
Mesechinus
  • Daurian hedgehog (M. dauuricus)
  • Hugh's hedgehog (M. hughi)
  • Gaoligong forest hedgehog (M. wangi)
  • Small-toothed forest hedgehog (M. miodon)
  • Eastern forest hedgehog (M. orientalis)
Paraechinus
  • Desert hedgehog (P. aethiopicus)
  • Brandt's hedgehog (P. hypomelas)
  • Indian hedgehog (P. micropus)
  • Bare-bellied hedgehog (P. nudiventris)
Echinosorex
  • Moonrat (E. gymnura)
Hylomys
  • Dwarf gymnure (H. parvus)
  • Javan short-tailed gymnure (H. suillus)
  • Bornean short-tailed gymnure (H. dorsalis)
  • Max's short-tailed gymnure (H. maxi)
  • Dalat gymnure (H. macarong)
  • Northern short-tailed gymnure (H. peguensis)
  • Leuser gymnure (H. vorax)
Neohylomys
  • Hainan gymnure (N. hainanensis)
Neotetracus
  • Shrew gymnure (N. sinensis)
Otohylomys
  • Long-eared gymnure (O. megalotis)
Podogymnura
  • Dinagat gymnure (P. aureospinula)
  • Mindanao gymnure (P. truei)
Crocidura
(White-toothed
shrews)
  • Cyrenaica shrew (C. aleksandrisi)
  • East African highland shrew (C. allex)
  • Andaman shrew (C. andamanensis)
  • C. annamitensis
  • Ansell's shrew (C. ansellorum)
  • Arabian shrew (C. arabica)
  • Jackass shrew (C. arispa)
  • Armenian shrew (C. armenica)
  • Asian gray shrew (C. attenuata)
  • Hun shrew (C. attila)
  • Bailey's shrew (C. baileyi)
  • Kinabalu shrew (C. baluensis)
  • Batak shrew (C. batakorum)
  • Mindanao shrew (C. beatus)
  • Beccari's shrew (C. beccarii)
  • Bottego's shrew (C. bottegi)
  • Bale shrew (C. bottegoides)
  • Thick-tailed shrew (C. brunnea)
  • Buettikofer's shrew (C. buettikoferi)
  • African dusky shrew (C. caliginea)
  • Canarian shrew (C. canariensis)
  • Caspian shrew (C. caspica)
  • Cinderella shrew (C. cinderella)
  • Congo white-toothed shrew (C. congobelgica)
  • C. cranbrooki
  • Long-footed shrew (C. crenata)
  • Crosse's shrew (C. crossei)
  • Reddish-gray musk shrew (C. cyanea)
  • Dent's shrew (C. denti)
  • Desperate shrew (C. desperata)
  • Dhofar shrew (C. dhofarensis)
  • Long-tailed musk shrew (C. dolichura)
  • Doucet's musk shrew (C. douceti)
  • Dsinezumi shrew (C. dsinezumi)
  • Eisentraut's shrew (C. eisentrauti)
  • Elgon shrew (C. elgonius)
  • Elongated shrew (C. elongata)
  • Heather shrew (C. erica)
  • Fischer's shrew (C. fischeri)
  • Greater red musk shrew (C. flavescens)
  • Flower's shrew (C. floweri)
  • Bornean shrew (C. foetida)
  • Fox's shrew (C. foxi)
  • Southeast Asian shrew (C. fuliginosa)
  • Savanna shrew (C. fulvastra)
  • Smoky white-toothed shrew (C. fumosa)
  • Bicolored musk shrew (C. fuscomurina)
  • Glass's shrew (C. glassi)
  • Gmelin's white-toothed shrew (C. gmelini)
  • Goliath shrew (C. goliath)
  • Peters's musk shrew (C. gracilipes)
  • Large-headed shrew (C. grandiceps)
  • Greater Mindanao shrew (C. grandis)
  • Grasse's shrew (C. grassei)
  • Luzon shrew (C. grayi)
  • Greenwood's shrew (C. greenwoodi)
  • C. guy
  • Harenna shrew (C. harenna)
  • C. hikmiya
  • Hildegarde's shrew (C. hildegardeae)
  • Hill's shrew (C. hilliana)
  • Lesser red musk shrew (C. hirta)
  • Andaman spiny shrew (C. hispida)
  • Horsfield's shrew (C. horsfieldii)
  • Hutan shrew (C. hutanis)
  • North African white-toothed shrew (C. ichnusae)
  • Indochinese shrew (C. indochinensis)
  • Jackson's shrew (C. jacksoni)
  • Jenkins's shrew (C. jenkinsi)
  • Jouvenet's shrew (C. jouvenetae)
  • Katinka's shrew (C. katinka)
  • Ke Go shrew (C. kegoensis)
  • Kivu shrew (C. kivuana)
  • Lamotte's shrew (C. lamottei)
  • Kivu long-haired shrew (C. lanosa)
  • Ussuri white-toothed shrew (C. lasiura)
  • Latona's shrew (C. latona)
  • Sulawesi shrew (C. lea)
  • Sumatran giant shrew (C. lepidura)
  • Bicolored shrew (C. leucodon)
  • Sulawesi tiny shrew (C. levicula)
  • Butiaba naked-tailed shrew (C. littoralis)
  • Savanna swamp shrew (C. longipes)
  • Lucina's shrew (C. lucina)
  • Ludia's shrew (C. ludia)
  • Moonshine shrew (C. luna)
  • Mauritanian shrew (C. lusitania)
  • MacArthur's shrew (C. macarthuri)
  • MacMillan's shrew (C. macmillani)
  • Nyiro shrew (C. macowi)
  • Malayan shrew (C. malayana)
  • Manenguba shrew (C. manengubae)
  • Makwassie musk shrew (C. maquassiensis)
  • Swamp musk shrew (C. mariquensis)
  • Gracile naked-tailed shrew (C. maurisca)
  • Javanese shrew (C. maxi)
  • Mindoro shrew (C. mindorus)
  • Sri Lankan long-tailed shrew (C. miya)
  • Kilimanjaro shrew (C. monax)
  • Sunda shrew (C. monticola)
  • Montane white-toothed shrew (C. montis)
  • West African long-tailed shrew (C. muricauda)
  • Mossy forest shrew (C. musseri)
  • Ugandan musk shrew (C. mutesae)
  • Somali dwarf shrew (C. nana)
  • Savanna dwarf shrew (C. nanilla)
  • Peninsular shrew (C. negligens)
  • Negros shrew (C. negrina)
  • Nicobar shrew (C. nicobarica)
  • Nigerian shrew (C. nigeriae)
  • Blackish white-toothed shrew (C. nigricans)
  • Black-footed shrew (C. nigripes)
  • African black shrew (C. nigrofusca)
  • Nimba shrew (C. nimbae)
  • Niobe's shrew (C. niobe)
  • West African pygmy shrew (C. obscurior)
  • African giant shrew (C. olivieri)
  • Oriental shrew (C. orientalis)
  • Ryukyu shrew (C. orii)
  • Palawan shrew (C. palawanensis)
  • Panay shrew (C. panayensis)
  • Sumatran long-tailed shrew (C. paradoxura)
  • Small-footed shrew (C. parvipes)
  • Sahelian tiny shrew (C. pasha)
  • Pale gray shrew (C. pergrisea)
  • Guramba shrew (C. phaeura)
  • C. phanluongi
  • Phu Hoc shrew (C. phuquocensis)
  • Cameroonian shrew (C. picea)
  • Pitman's shrew (C. pitmani)
  • Flat-headed shrew (C. planiceps)
  • Fraser's musk shrew (C. poensis)
  • Polia's shrew (C. polia)
  • Kashmir white-toothed shrew (C. pullata)
  • Rainey's shrew (C. raineyi)
  • Negev shrew (C. ramona)
  • Chinese white-toothed shrew (C. rapax)
  • Egyptian pygmy shrew (C. religiosa)
  • Sulawesi white-handed shrew (C. rhoditis)
  • Roosevelt's shrew (C. roosevelti)
  • Greater white-toothed shrew (C. russula)
  • Ugandan lowland shrew (C. selina)
  • Lesser rock shrew (C. serezkyensis)
  • Asian lesser white-toothed shrew (C. shantungensis)
  • Siberian shrew (C. sibirica)
  • Sicilian shrew (C. sicula)
  • Lesser gray-brown musk shrew (C. silacea)
  • Desert musk shrew (C. smithii)
  • Sokolov's shrew (C. sokolovi)
  • Somali shrew (C. somalica)
  • Kahuzi swamp shrew (C. stenocephala)
  • Lesser white-toothed shrew (C. suaveolens)
  • Iranian shrew (C. susiana)
  • Tanzanian shrew (C. tansaniana)
  • Tarella shrew (C. tarella)
  • Saharan shrew (C. tarfayensis)
  • Telford's shrew (C. telfordi)
  • Timor shrew (C. tenuis)
  • Thalia's shrew (C. thalia)
  • Therese's shrew (C. theresae)
  • São Tomé shrew (C. thomensis)
  • Christmas Island shrew (C. trichura)
  • Turbo shrew (C. turba)
  • Ultimate shrew (C. ultima)
  • Usambara shrew (C. usambarae)
  • Savanna path shrew (C. viaria)
  • Mamfe shrew (C. virgata)
  • Voi shrew (C. voi)
  • Voracious shrew (C. vorax)
  • Banka shrew (C. vosmaeri)
  • Lesser Ryukyu shrew (C. watasei)
  • Whitaker's shrew (C. whitakeri)
  • Wimmer's shrew (C. wimmeri)
  • Hainan Island shrew (C. wuchihensis)
  • Xanthippe's shrew (C. xantippe)
  • Yankari shrew (C. yankariensis)
  • Mikhail Zaitsev's shrew (C. zaitsevi )
  • Zaphir's shrew (C. zaphiri)
  • Zarudny's rock shrew (C. zarudnyi)
  • Upemba shrew (C. zimmeri)
  • Cretan shrew (C. zimmermanni)
Diplomesodon
  • Piebald shrew (D. pulchellus)
Feroculus
  • Kelaart's long-clawed shrew (F. feroculus)
Palawanosorex
  • Palawan moss shrew (P. muscorum)
Paracrocidura
(Large-headed
shrews)
  • Grauer's large-headed shrew (P. graueri)
  • Greater large-headed shrew (P. maxima)
  • Lesser large-headed shrew (P. schoutedeni)
Ruwenzorisorex
  • Ruwenzori shrew (R. suncoides)
Scutisorex
  • Hero shrew (S. somereni)
  • Thor's hero shrew (S. thori)
Solisorex
  • Pearson's long-clawed shrew (S. pearsoni)
Suncus
  • Taita shrew (S. aequatorius)
  • Black shrew (S. ater)
  • Day's shrew (S. dayi)
  • Etruscan shrew (S. etruscus)
  • Sri Lankan shrew (S. fellowesgordoni)
  • Bornean pygmy shrew (S. hosei)
  • Least dwarf shrew (S. infinitesimus)
  • Greater dwarf shrew (S. lixus)
  • Madagascan pygmy shrew (S. madagascariensis)
  • Malayan pygmy shrew (S. malayanus)
  • Climbing shrew (S. megalura)
  • Flores shrew (S. mertensi)
  • Asian highland shrew (S. montanus)
  • Asian house shrew (S. murinus)
  • Remy's pygmy shrew (S. remyi)
  • Anderson's shrew (S. stoliczkanus)
  • Lesser dwarf shrew (S. varilla)
  • Jungle shrew (S. zeylanicus)
Sylvisorex
(Forest shrews)
  • Dudu Akaibe's pygmy shrew (S. akaibei)
  • Cameroonian forest shrew (S. cameruniensis)
  • Corbet's forest shrew (S. corbeti)
  • Grant's forest shrew (S. granti)
  • Howell's forest shrew (S. howelli)
  • Bioko forest shrew (S. isabellae)
  • Johnston's forest shrew (S. johnstoni)
  • Kongana shrew (S. konganensis)
  • Moon forest shrew (S. lunaris)
  • Mount Cameroon forest shrew (S. morio)
  • Greater forest shrew (S. ollula)
  • Lesser forest shrew (S. oriundus)
  • Rain forest shrew (S. pluvialis)
  • Volcano shrew (S. vulcanorum)
Anourosoricini
Anourosorex
(Asian mole shrews)
  • Assam mole shrew (A. assamensis)
  • Giant mole shrew (A. schmidi)
  • Chinese mole shrew (A. squamipes)
  • Taiwanese mole shrew (A. yamashinai)
Blarinellini
Blarinella
(Asiatic short-tailed
shrews)
  • Indochinese short-tailed shrew (B. griselda)
  • Asiatic short-tailed shrew (B. quadraticauda)
  • Burmese short-tailed shrew (B. wardi)
Blarinini
Blarina
(American short-tailed
shrews)
  • Northern short-tailed shrew (B. brevicauda)
  • Southern short-tailed shrew (B. carolinensis)
  • Elliot's short-tailed shrew (B. hylophaga)
  • Everglades short-tailed shrew (B. peninsulae)
  • Sherman's short-tailed shrew (B. shermani)
Cryptotis
(Small-eared
shrews)
C. mexicana group
Mexican small-eared shrew (C. mexicana)
Nelson's small-eared shrew (C. nelsoni)
Grizzled Mexican small-eared shrew (C. obscura)
Phillips' small-eared shrew (C. phillipsii)
C. goldmani set
Central Mexican broad-clawed shrew (C. alticola)
Goldman's broad-clawed shrew (C. goldmani)
Goodwin's broad-clawed shrew (C. goodwini)
Guatemalan broad-clawed shrew (C. griseoventris)
C. lacertosus
C. mam
Oaxacan broad-clawed shrew (C. peregrina)
C. nigrescens group
Eastern Cordillera small-footed shrew (C. brachyonyx)
Colombian small-eared shrew (C. colombiana)
Honduran small-eared shrew (C. hondurensis)
Yucatan small-eared shrew (C. mayensis)
Darién small-eared shrew (C. mera)
Merriam's small-eared shrew (C. merriami)
Blackish small-eared shrew (C. nigrescens)
C. thomasi group
Southern Colombian small-eared shrew (C. andinus)
Ecuadorian small-eared shrew (C. equatoris)
Rainer's small-eared shrew (C. huttereri)
Medellín small-eared shrew (C. medellinia)
Merida small-eared shrew (C. meridensis)
Wandering small-eared shrew (C. montivaga)
Peruvian small-eared shrew (C. peruviensis)
Scaly-footed small-eared shrew (C. squaipes)
Tamá small-eared shrew (C. tamensis)
Thomas's small-eared shrew (C. thomasi)
C. parva group
Central American least shrew (C. orophila)
North American least shrew (C. parva)
Tropical small-eared shrew (C. tropicalis)
Ungrouped / relict
Enders's small-eared shrew (C. endersi)
Talamancan small-eared shrew (C. gracilis)
Big Mexican small-eared shrew (C. magna)
Nectogalini
Chimarrogale
(Asiatic water
shrews)
  • Malayan water shrew (C. hantu)
  • Himalayan water shrew (C. himalayica)
  • Bornean water shrew (C. phaeura)
  • Japanese water shrew (C. platycephalus)
  • Chinese water shrew (C. styani)
  • Sumatran water shrew (C. sumatrana)
Chodsigoa
  • Van Sung's shrew (C. caovansunga)
  • De Winton's shrew (C. hypsibia)
  • Lamulate shrew (C. lamula)
  • Lowe's shrew (C. parca)
  • Pygmy brown-toothed shrew (C. parva)
  • Salenski's shrew (C. salenskii)
  • Smith's shrew (C. smithii)
  • Lesser Taiwanese shrew (C. sodalis)
Episoriculus
  • Hodgsons's brown-toothed shrew (E. caudatus)
  • Taiwanese brown-toothed shrew (E. fumidus)
  • Long-tailed brown-toothed shrew (E. leucops)
  • Long-tailed mountain shrew (E. macrurus)
Nectogale
  • Elegant water shrew (N. elegans)
Neomys
  • Mediterranean water shrew (N. anomalus)
  • Eurasian water shrew (N. fodiens)
  • Transcaucasian water shrew (N. teres)
Soriculus
  • Himalayan shrew (S. nigrescens)
Notiosoricini
Megasorex
  • Mexican shrew (M. gigas)
Notiosorex
  • Cockrum's gray shrew (N. cockrumi)
  • Crawford's gray shrew (N. crawfordi)
  • Large-eared gray shrew (N. evotis)
  • Villa's gray shrew (N. villai)
Sorex
(Long-tailed
shrews)
Subgenus
Otisorex
  • Long-tailed shrew (S. dispar)
  • Smoky shrew (S. fumeus)
  • American pygmy shrew (S. hoyi)
  • Large-toothed shrew (S. macrodon)
  • Carmen mountain shrew (S. milleri)
  • Dwarf shrew (S. nanus)
  • Mexican long-tailed shrew (S. oreopolus)
  • Orizaba long-tailed shrew (S. orizabae)
  • Ornate shrew (S. ornatus)
  • Inyo shrew (S. tenellus)
  • Verapaz shrew (S. veraepacis)
S. vagrans complex
Glacier Bay water shrew (S. alaskanus)
Baird's shrew (S. bairdii)
Marsh shrew (S. bendirii)
Montane shrew (S. monticolus)
New Mexico shrew (S. neomexicanus)
Pacific shrew (S. pacificus)
American water shrew (S. palustris)
Fog shrew (S. sonomae)
Vagrant shrew (S. vagrans)
S. cinereus group
Kamchatka shrew (S. camtschatica)
Cinereus shrew (S. cinereus)
Prairie shrew (S. haydeni)
Saint Lawrence Island shrew (S. jacksoni)
Paramushir shrew (S. leucogaster)
Southeastern shrew (S. longirostris)
Mount Lyell shrew (S. lyelli)
Portenko's shrew (S. portenkoi)
Preble's shrew (S. preblei)
Pribilof Island shrew (S. pribilofensis)
Olympic shrew (S. rohweri)
Barren ground shrew (S. ugyunak)
Subgenus
Sorex
  • Dneper common shrew (S. averini)
  • Lesser striped shrew (S. bedfordiae)
  • Greater stripe-backed shrew (S. cylindricauda)
  • Chinese highland shrew (S. excelsus)
  • Azumi shrew (S. hosonoi)
  • Chinese shrew (S. sinalis)
  • Alaska tiny shrew (S. yukonicus)
S. alpinus group
Alpine shrew (S. alpinus)
Ussuri shrew (S. mirabilis)
S. araneus group
Valais shrew (S. antinorii)
Common shrew (S. araneus)
Udine shrew (S. arunchi)
Crowned shrew (S. coronatus)
Siberian large-toothed shrew (S. daphaenodon)
Iberian shrew (S. granarius)
Caucasian shrew (S. satunini)
S. arcticus group
Arctic shrew (S. arcticus)
Maritime shrew (S. maritimensis)
S. tundrensis group
Tien Shan shrew (S. asper)
Gansu shrew (S. cansulus)
Tundra shrew (S. tundrensis)
S. minutus group
Buchara shrew (S. buchariensis)
Kozlov's shrew (S. kozlovi)
Caucasian pygmy shrew (S. volnuchini)
S. caecutiens group
Laxmann's shrew (S. caecutiens)
Taiga shrew (S. isodon)
Eurasian least shrew (S. minutissimus)
Eurasian pygmy shrew (S. minutus)
Flat-skulled shrew (S. roboratus)
Shinto shrew (S. shinto)
Long-clawed shrew (S. unguiculatus)
S. gracillimus group
Slender shrew (S. gracillimus)
S. raddei group
Radde's shrew (S. raddei)
S. samniticus group
Apennine shrew (S. samniticus)
incertae sedis
  • Arizona shrew (S. arizonae)
  • Zacatecas shrew (S. emarginatus)
  • Merriam's shrew (S. merriami)
  • Kashmir pygmy shrew (S. planiceps)
  • Saussure's shrew (S. saussurei)
  • Sclater's shrew (S. sclateri)
  • San Cristobal shrew (S. stizodon)
  • Tibetan shrew (S. thibetanus)
  • Trowbridge's shrew (S. trowbridgii)
  • Chestnut-bellied shrew (S. ventralis)
  • Veracruz shrew (S. veraecrucis)
Congosorex
(Congo shrews)
  • Phillips's shrew (C. phillipsorum)
  • Greater Congo shrew (C. polli)
  • Lesser Congo shrew (C. verheyeni)
Myosorex
(Mouse shrews)
  • Babault's mouse shrew (M. babaulti)
  • Montane mouse shrew (M. blarina)
  • Bururi forest shrew (M. bururiensis)
  • Dark-footed mouse shrew (M. cafer)
  • Eisentraut's mouse shrew (M. eisentrauti)
  • Geata mouse shrew (M. geata)
  • Nyika mouse shrew (M. gnoskei)
  • Kihaule's mouse shrew (M. kihaulei)
  • Long-tailed forest shrew (M. longicaudatus)
  • Oku mouse shrew (M. okuensis)
  • Rumpi mouse shrew (M. rumpii)
  • Schaller's mouse shrew (M. schalleri)
  • Sclater's mouse shrew (M. sclateri)
  • Thin mouse shrew (M. tenuis)
  • Forest shrew (M. varius)
  • Kilimanjaro mouse shrew (M. zinki)
Surdisorex
(African mole
shrews)
  • Aberdare mole shrew (S. norae)
  • Mount Kenya mole shrew (S. polulus)
Scalopinae
(New World moles
and relatives)
Condylura
  • Star-nosed mole (C. cristata)
Parascalops
  • Hairy-tailed mole (P. breweri)
Scalopus
  • Eastern mole (S. aquaticus)
Scapanulus
  • Gansu mole (S. oweni)
Scapanus
(Western North
American moles)
  • Broad-footed mole (S. latimanus)
  • Coast mole (S. orarius)
  • Townsend's mole (S. townsendii)
Talpinae
(Old World moles
and relatives)
Desmana
  • Russian desman (D. moschata)
Dymecodon
  • True's shrew mole (D. pilirostris)
Euroscaptor
  • Greater Chinese mole (E. grandis)
  • Kloss's mole (E. klossi)
  • Long-nosed mole (E. longirostris)
  • Himalayan mole (E. micrura)
  • Small-toothed mole (E. parvidens)
  • Vietnamese mole (E. subanura)
Galemys
  • Pyrenean desman (G. pyrenaicus)
Mogera
  • Echigo mole (M. etigo)
  • Insular mole (M. insularis)
  • Kano mole (M. kanoana)
  • Kobe mole (M. kobeae)
  • Small Japanese mole (M. imaizumii)
  • Large mole (M. robusta)
  • Sado mole (M. tokudae)
  • Japanese mole (M. wogura)
  • Senkaku mole (M. uchidai)
Neurotrichus
  • American shrew mole (N. gibbsii)
Oreoscaptor
  • Japanese mountain mole (O. mizura)
Parascaptor
  • White-tailed mole (P. leucura)
Scaptochirus
  • Short-faced mole (S. moschatus)
Scaptonyx
  • Long-tailed mole (S. fusicaudus)
Talpa
  • Altai mole (T. altaica)
  • Aquitanian mole (T. aquitania)
  • Blind mole (T. caeca)
  • Caucasian mole (T. caucasica)
  • European mole (T. europaea)
  • Père David's mole (T. davidiana)
  • Levant mole (T. levantis)
  • Martino's mole (T. martinorum)
  • Spanish mole (T. occidentalis)
  • Ognev's mole (T. ognevi)
  • Roman mole (T. romana)
  • Balkan mole (T. stankovici)
  • Talysch mole (T. talyschensis)
Urotrichus
  • Japanese shrew mole (U. talpoides)
Uropsilinae
(Chinese shrew-like
moles)
  • Equivalent-teeth shrew mole (U. aequodonenia)
  • Anderson's shrew mole (U. andersoni)
  • Black-backed shrew mole (U. atronates)
  • Dabie Mountains shrew mole (U. dabieshanensis)
  • Gracile shrew mole (U. gracilis)
  • Inquisitive shrew mole (U. investigator)
  • Snow Mountain shrew mole (U. nivatus)
  • Chinese shrew mole (U. soricipes)
Atopogale
  • Cuban solenodon (A. cubana)
Solenodon
  • Hispaniolan solenodon (S. paradoxus)
Taxon identifiers
Solenodon cubanus