There seem to be several jungle cats in European zoos (ZootierlisteHomepage. I would like to see a Chinese mountain cat.
There seem to be several jungle cats in European zoos (ZootierlisteHomepage. I would like to see a Chinese mountain cat.
neither of these is a change. The IUCN already had jaguarundi in that genus and had the Chinese mountain cat as a full species. See post 12 and 13 of the thread (from August, but it hadn't changed prior to that any time recently).On the IUCN list (38 species), the jaguarundi is back in its own genus of Herpailurus. Also the Chinese mountain cat is a full species which I find odd - I thought it had been definitively placed as a subspecies of wildcat.
Prionodon as feline? Dentition is felid and feline affinity is not a novel suggestion, going back to the 19th C, now demonstrates. Were it fossil it would be called a "stem felid" but in standard Linnean boxes it's either a felid, it's own redundant - idae or lumped back down into a padaphyletic grade.
Well it would explain the species number of felids being bumped slightly if it has been lumped: there has been talk of this in the past before.
Prionodon = Prionodontidae so the family is redundant; if you have to give it a family, it's the most primitive cat after all. And sooner or later it will end up lumped on formal taxonomic lists as such. Rather than a "Viverrid" or a senseless one genus stray family.
A family containing only a single genus is neither senseless nor redundant - unless you suggest that the following extant mammal families are also all senseless and/or redundant:
Orycteropodidae
Dugongidae
Trichechidae
Cyclopedidae
Bradypodidae
Megalonychidae
Dasypodidae
Ptilocercidae
Cynocephalidae
Daubentoniidae
Lepilemuridae
Aotidae
Ochotonidae
Pedetidae
Castoridae
Diatomyidae
Petromuridae
Thryonomyidae
Ctenomyidae
Cuniculidae
Dinomyidae
Myocastoridae
Calomyscidae
Aplodontiidae
Solenodontidae
Cetotheriidae
Eschrichtiidae
Kogiidae
Physeteridae
Iniidae
Platanistidae
Pontoporiidae
Antilocapridae
Moschidae
Myzopodidae
Thyropteridae
Mystacinidae
Noctilionidae
Nycteridae
Rhinolophidae
Craseonycteridae
Rhinopomatidae
Equidae
Tapiridae
Manidae
Nandiniidae
Odobenidae
Ailuridae
I am particularly intrigued about where you suggest the Maniidae should be lumped into!
Some of those taxa have more genera than you think ie. Ailuridae has things like scavenging carnivores in its fossil record, Odobenidae too was a lot more diverse in its past. Or they are genuine isolates like the aardvark or even the walrus within pinnipeds (still not proved which "side" walruses are on).
Asian linsangs however are finally resolved as primitive cats (felid side of Feliformia). As was predicted based on morphological evidence.
However the upcoming special edition will be devoted solely to an updated taxonomy. This is one I am really looking forward to and I am sure some of you will be anxious to hear my report.