AFFINITIES OF TAMAULIPAN MAMMALS

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Owing to the differences in climate from one region to another, the flora and fauna also differ, especially in the southern part of the state as compared with the northern part.

For expressing the taxonomic resemblance of mammalian faunas having nearly equal numbers of taxa, Burt (1959:139) recommended the following formula: C×100/(N1+N2-C) (where C is the number of taxa common to the two faunas, N1 is the number of taxa in the smaller fauna, and N2 is the number of taxa in the larger fauna). For non-flying mammals the resemblance of the Tamaulipan fauna to that of Texas, adjacent to the north, and Veracruz, adjacent to the south, is as follows:

Genera.—Texas 65 per cent, Veracruz 60 per cent.

Species.—Texas 45 per cent, Veracruz 39 per cent.

For bats the resemblance of the Tamaulipan fauna to those of Texas and Veracruz is as follows:

Genera.—Texas 40 per cent, Veracruz 51 per cent.

Species.—Texas 24, Veracruz 39.

Table 1.—Number of Genera and Species of Non-introduced Land Mammals in Three States.

Number of taxa Number of taxa in common
genera species genera species
States non-bats bats non-bats bats non-bats bats non-bats bats
Texas 51 12 103 25 39 10 58 12
Tamaulipas 48 23 83 36 .. .. .. ..
Veracruz 53 36 94 60 38 20 50 27

For all of the land mammals of Tamaulipas, the resemblance is as follows:

Genera.—Texas 58, Veracruz 57.

Species.—Texas 40, Veracruz 39.

On the whole, the fauna of Tamaulipas resembles faunas of both the Brazilian Subregion and the North American part of the Nearctic Subregion (see Hershkovitz, 1958:611). Considering the 48 genera of non-flying land mammals of Tamaulipas, 24 genera occur in habitats from the North American part through habitats of northern MÉxico into the Brazilian Subregion. Of the remaining 24 genera, 16 occur in the North American part of the Nearctic Subregion or in it and the part of northern MÉxico north of the Brazilian boundary, whereas eight occur in the Brazilian Subregion or in it and the northern part of MÉxico. None occurs only in Tamaulipas or only in northern MÉxico.

The non-flying fauna of the coastal plain east of the Sierra Madre Oriental and south of the Sierra de Tamaulipas and Soto la Marina is mainly tropical in affinities; only 27 per cent of that fauna (at the subspecific level) resembles the fauna north of Soto la Marina, which is Nearctic in its affinities. The fauna of the Sierra de Tamaulipas has a greater taxonomic resemblance (20.4 per cent at subspecific level) to that of the Sierra Madre Oriental, than does the fauna of the Sierra San Carlos (17.6 per cent). Taxonomic resemblance between the faunas from the Sierra San Carlos and the Sierra de Tamaulipas amounts to only 16.1 per cent. Therefore, the faunas of these two Sierras (both are included in the same zoogeographic unit) resemble each other less than either resembles the fauna of the Sierra Madre Oriental (in another zoogeographic unit). Of the three sierran faunas, those of the Sierra Madre Oriental and the Sierra de Tamaulipas have most in common. Migration from one to the other in relative recent time may account for the resemblance. The Sierra San Carlos may have been isolated for a long time and interchange between its fauna and those of the other two sierras, therefore, may have been slight.

Study of the taxonomic resemblance shows that the dividing line, in eastern MÉxico, between Nearctic and Neotropical faunas is along the eastern base of the Sierra Madre Oriental, the southern base of the Sierra de Tamaulipas and thence to the coast at or near Soto la Marina.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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