Showing posts with label Erethizontidae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erethizontidae. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

[Mammalogy • 2026] Coendou sangay • A New Species of Coendou (Rodentia: Erethizontidae) within the Hyper-diverse Mammalian Community of Sangay National Park in Ecuador

 

Coendou sangay Brito, 

in Brito​, Curay, León-Caldas, Lojan-Cueva, Ojala-Barbour, Pozo-Zamora, Simba, Tito, Vargas, Vega-Yánez et Batallas, 2026. 
Sangay Porcupine | Puerco espín de Sangay  ||  DOI:  doi.org/10.7717/peerj.21382

Abstract 
The tropical Andes harbor high levels of undocumented biodiversity, often hidden within complex ecological communities that require sustained sampling efforts to be fully characterized. Here, we describe a new species of porcupine of the genus Coendou, discovered within the hyper-diverse mammalian assemblage of Sangay National Park (Sangay) in Ecuador. The description is based on an adult specimen collected at 2,400 m on the eastern slopes of the Andes. Phylogenetic analyses using mitochondrial Cytochrome b (Cytb) place the new species as a distinct lineage within the Clade B (sensu (Voss, Hubbard & Jansa, 2013)), showing significant genetic divergence (p-distance > 6.0%) from its closest congeners, C. speratus, C. nycthemera and C. bicolor. Morphologically, Coendou sangay sp. nov. is diagnosed by its medium body size, a remarkably short tail (approx. 26% of head-and-body length), tricolored bristle-quills with brownish-red tips, and distinct cranial features, including a long nasal bone and a mesopterygoid fossa that does not reach the second upper molar. This discovery is contextualized within a comprehensive mammalian inventory of Sangay, compiled over 15 years of fieldwork. Despite an intensive sampling effort totaling 12,800 trap-nights and 2,400 camera-trap days, only a single specimen was obtained, highlighting the species status as a rare, canopy-dwelling specialist. We report 170 mammal species within the park, including 18 endemic and 35 threatened taxa. With a richness of 0.03 species per km2, Sangay ranks as the most mammal-diverse protected area per unit area in the Tropics. Our results demonstrate that intensive, long-term inventories are essential for identifying cryptic arboreal lineages that remain “invisible” to traditional terrestrial sampling. Finally, we emphasize the urgent need for conservation policies, including the strengthening of biological corridors and the limitation on road and mining expansion, to safeguard this high-elevation biodiversity hotspot.

Keywords: Eastern Andes, Cloud forest, Rare species, Biodiversity hotspot, Species delimitation

Systematic
Family Erethizontidae Bonaparte, 1845

Genus Coendou Lacépède, 1799

Coendou sangay new species. Brito
Coendou rufescens: Brito & Ojala-Barbour (2016), not Coendou rufescens (Gray, 1865)
Coendou rufescens: Batallas & Brito (2022), not Coendou rufescens (Gray, 1865)

Sangay Porcupine, Puerco espín de Sangay (in Spanish)

Diagnosis. Coendou sangay sp. nov. is distinguished from other species of the genus by its medium-sized body (HBL 460 mm) and very small tail (26% LT/HBL), absence of long fur, tricolored bristle-quills (with brownish red tips), spiny ventral fur, and a unique combination of cranial features, including a long nasal bone (35% LN/CIL), constricted maxillary bony bridge, and a mesopterygoid fossa that does not reach M2.

Coendou sangay sp. nov. (MECN 4343, holotype).
 (A) External appearance of the adult female alive in its natural habitat in the Sangay, Ecuador; (B) lateral and (C) posterior view of the revealing an aposematic coloration.
 Photographs by J. Brito.

Selected external and soft anatomical features of Coendou sangay sp. nov. (MECN 4343, holotype).
Ventral view of the hand (A), and of the foot (B); detail of the muzzle (C); perineal region (D), and ventral view of the tail (E).
 Abbreviations: a = anus, v = vagina. Photographs by J. Brito.


Etymology: This species is named in honor of Sangay National Park, which is the largest Andean national park in Ecuador. The park includes a large elevation gradient along the eastern slopes, or Eastern Cordillera, of the Andes and is recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The park gets its name from Sangay, one of Ecuador’s most active volcanoes, which is located within its boundaries.

Field expedition to Guabisai (A), Cubillines (B), and sampling and collecting in the area (C, D).
Photographs of J. Brito (A, C, D), and G. Pozo (B).


Jorge Brito​, Jenny Curay, Víctor León-Caldas, Pamela Lojan-Cueva, Reed Ojala-Barbour, Glenda Pozo-Zamora, Laura Simba, Paul Tito, Rocío Vargas, Mateo A. Vega-Yánez and Diego Batallas. 2026. Discovery of A New Species of Coendou (Rodentia: Erethizontidae) within the Hyper-diverse Mammalian Community of Sangay National Park in Ecuador. PeerJ. 14:e21382 DOI:  doi.org/10.7717/peerj.21382 [June 8, 2026]

Thursday, February 20, 2025

[Mammalogy • 2025] Coendou vossi • A Review of the Quichua Porcupine Coendou quichua complex (Rodentia: Erethizontidae) with the Description of A New Species from Colombia

 

Coendou vossi 
Ramírez-Chaves, Mazepa, Morales-Martínez, Suárez-Castro, Colmenares-Pinzón, Pulido-Santacruz & Noguera-Urbano, 2025

 
Abstract
Coendou quichua is a widely distributed trans-Andean species in Colombia, Ecuador, and Panama. However, analysis of the cytochrome b (Cytb) gene suggests the presence of cryptic diversity. Recent reviews found that morphological variation within this taxon is mainly associated with elevation. Still, mitochondrial divergence values between some populations are similar to those reported between well-diagnosable sister species in the genus. Here, we provide new Cytb sequences from Colombian and Ecuadorian specimens and morphological observations from specimens collected in different natural regions to show that C. quichua is indeed a species complex. Coendou quichua complex contains 3 separate lineages: (i) the typical C. quichua from the Andes of Ecuador; (ii) a sister lineage from the Chocó-Darién ecoregion; and (iii) an undescribed new species from wet and dry forests of the Magdalena inter-Andean valley and the Caribbean regions of Colombia. Based on morphological, ecological niche modeling, and geographical analyses, the lineage from Chocó-Darién in Colombia and Ecuador is here treated as a different species for which the name C. rothschildi is available. The lineage involving samples from the wet and dry forests of the Magdalena inter-Andean Valley and the Caribbean regions represents an unnamed taxon described herein as Coendou vossi sp. nov., endemic to Colombia.

cytochrome b, endemism, geographic variation, inter-Andean valleys, morphometry, South America



Coendou vossi sp. nov.





Héctor E. Ramírez-Chaves, Glib O. Mazepa, Darwin M. Morales-Martínez, Andrés Felipe Suárez-Castro, Javier E. Colmenares-Pinzón, Paola Pulido-Santacruz and Elkin A. Noguera-Urbano. 2025. A Review of the Quichua Porcupine Coendou quichua complex (Rodentia: Erethizontidae) with the Description of A New Species from Colombia. Journal of Mammalogy. gyae140. DOI: doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyae140
Resumen: Coendou quichua se considera una especie trasandina de amplia distribución que se encuentra en Colombia, Ecuador y Panamá. Sin embargo, análisis del gen citocromo b (Cytb) sugieren la presencia de diversidad críptica. Revisiones recientes encontraron una variación morfológica dentro de este taxón asociada principalmente a la elevación, mientras que los valores de divergencia mitocondrial entre algunas poblaciones son similares a los reportados entre especies hermanas del género. Proporcionamos nuevas secuencias de Cytb de especímenes colombianos y ecuatorianos, así como observaciones morfológicas de especímenes recolectados en diferentes regiones naturales para mostrar que C. quichua es de hecho un complejo de especies. El complejo C. quichua posee tres linajes: (i) el típico C. quichua de los Andes de Ecuador; (ii) un linaje hermano de la ecorregión de Chocó-Darién; y (iii) una nueva especie no descrita de bosques húmedos y secos del valle interandino del Magdalena y la región Caribe de Colombia. Con base en análisis morfológicos, y geográficos, junto a modelos de nicho ecológico, el linaje del Chocó-Darién es tratado como una especie diferente para la cual el nombre C. rothschildi está disponible. De manera similar, el linaje que involucra muestras de los bosques húmedos y secos del Valle interandino del Magdalena y del Caribe representa un taxón sin nombre disponible el cual describimos aquí como Coendou vossi sp. nov., endémico de Colombia.
citocromo b, endemismo, morfometría, valles interandinos, variación geográfica, Sudamérica

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

[Mammalogy • 2013] 'coandu-mirim' | Coendou speratus • A new species of New World Porcupine, Genus Coendou (Rodentia: Erethizontidae) from the Atlantic forest of northeastern Brazil



'coandu-mirim' | Coendou speratus
Pontes, Gadelha, Melo, De Sá, Loss, Junior, Costa & Leite 2013

Abstract
We report the discovery of a new species of Coendou (Rodentia, Erethizontidae), here designated Coendou speratus sp. nov. This small porcupine, locally known as 'coandu-mirim', is found in the Pernambuco Endemism Centre in the Atlantic coast of northeastern Brazil north of the São Francisco river, one of the most important known biodiversity hotspots. The geographic range of C. speratus overlaps with that of the larger, widespread C. prehensilis, but not with that of C. insidiosus from the southeastern Atlantic forest, nor with that of C. nycthemera, an eastern Amazonian species. Coendou speratus is a small-bodied, long-tailed species that appears to be completely spiny because it lacks long dorsal fur. The dorsal quills 
have conspicuously brownish red tips that contrast with the blackish dorsal background color. The new species is overall similar to C. nycthemera, but the dorsal body quills are typically tricolored in the former and bicolored in the latter. The new species is externally very distinct from C. insidiosus, especially because the latter has bicolored dorsal quills that are almost completely hidden beneath longer and homogeneous pale or dark hairs.
Key words: Biodiversity hotspot, Coendou, Mammalia, Neotropics, taxonomy


  

  



Pontes, Antonio R. M., José R. Gadelha, Éverton R. A. Melo, Fabrício B. De Sá, Ana C. Loss, Vilacio C. Junior, Leonora P. Costa & Yuri L. R. Leite. 2013. A new species of Porcupine, Genus Coendou (Rodentia: Erethizontidae) from the Atlantic forest of northeastern Brazil. Zootaxa. 3636 (3): 421–438 



New tree-living porcupine species discovered
The new species lives in a highly threatened forest ecosystem in Brazil, but scientists have hope that it can be saved.