gymnure

gymnure

mammal
      any of seven species of hedgehoglike mammals having a long muzzle with a protruding and mobile snout. Found in Southeast Asia and the Philippines, gymnures have a slim body, short tail, and long, slender limbs and feet. The eyes are large, as are the nearly hairless ears.

      Asian gymnures (genus Hylomys) inhabit tropical lowland rainforest and montane forest, and the five species are either strictly nocturnal or active day and night. They live on the forest floor, sometimes traveling along a network of pathways. Their long snout is used to probe leaf litter and humus, debris being tossed aside with jerks of the head and shoulders. Diet consists primarily of earthworms and arthropods (arthropod). There is at least one litter of one to three young per year; gestation lasts about a month.

      Asian gymnures weigh up to 45 grams (1.6 ounces), with bodies 9 to 15 cm (3.5 to 5.9 inches) long. The slender tail varies in length from one-fifth to one-half the body length. The soft, dense fur ranges in colour from olive brown to rusty brown, with grayish to yellowish or reddish underparts. Along the back a black stripe (strong or indistinct) may be present. The dark brown feet and tail appear hairless but are scantily furred.

      The short-tailed, or lesser, gymnure (H. suillus) ranges from continental Southeast Asia offshore to Tioman Island to the Indonesian islands of Sumatra, Java, and northern Borneo in hilly lowlands. The Sumatran gymnure (H. parvus) occurs in the mountains to 3,000 metres or more on Sumatra and Java. The shrew gymnure (H. sinensis) lives in cool and damp mountain forests at elevations of 300–2,700 metres in southern China and adjacent regions of Myanmar (Burma) and northern Vietnam. The Laos gymnure (H. megalotis) is restricted to limestone karst in the central part of the country. The Hainan gymnure (H. hainanensis) is endemic to Hainan Island (Hai-nan) off the coast of southern China.

      Philippine gymnures (genus Podogymnura) dwell in tropical rainforest on only two islands. They are also terrestrial and eat insects and worms, but their ecology is otherwise unknown. The Mindanao gymnure (P. truei) resembles Asian gymnures. The body is 12 to 15 cm long, with long, dense, and soft fur that is chestnut brown. It lives at 1,600–2,400 metres in the mountains of Mindanao. The Dinagat gymnure (P. aureospinula) of Dinagat Island, north of Mindanao, has a larger body (19 to 21 cm long), with spiny golden brown fur above and soft grayish fur below. The scantily furred, unpigmented tail of both species is about half as long as the head and body.

      Gymnures are classified in the hedgehog family, Erinaceidae, of the order Erinaceomorpha, which belongs to a larger group of mammals referred to as insectivores (insectivore). The moonrat (Echinosorex gymnurus) of Southeast Asia is the gymnure's closest living relative, and together they make up the subfamily Galericinae. Both are relicts from an evolutionary diversification of extinct species in 10 genera represented by fossils dating to the Eocene Epoch (54.8 to 33.7 million years ago) of Eurasia, the Oligocene Epoch (33.7 to 23.8 million years ago) of North America and the Mediterranean region, and the Miocene Epoch (23.8 to 5.3 million years ago) of Africa. Hylomys is represented by fossils from Miocene sediments in Southeast Asia.

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  • gymnure — gym·nure …   English syllables

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