The Center for Biodiversity
and Conservation’s integrated research, conservation, and
capacity building efforts in Mainland Southeast Asia incorporate
a strong focus on small mammals. This collection of
diverse species includes moles, shrews, bats, squirrels,
mice, rats, pikas, and rabbits; groups that are among the
region’s (and the world’s) most diverse yet least studied
mammalian groups. Our work is focused in the adjacent countries
of Vietnam and Lao PDR (Laos), which lie in the heart of
the Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot, an enormous and geographically
complex area south of China recognized for its globally significant
levels of biodiversity. Vietnam and Laos are home to the
southern and eastern-most extensions of the Himalayas as
well as a number of unique habitats, including isolated mountain
ranges (such as the Annamites), complexes of limestone (karst)
outcroppings, and enormous river systems (the Red and Mekong
Rivers) with their associated deltas.
Despite a long history of regional explorations dating back
to the 19th century, a large gap remains in our knowledge
of both the species diversity and natural history of Mainland
Southeast Asia’s small mammals. Among the fascinating
recent small mammal disco veries
coming from Vietnam and Laos are a striped rabbit (Nesolagus
timminsi), whose closest living relative is restricted
to the hills and mountains of Sumatra, and a “primitive”
rodent (Laonastes aenigmamus), the only known extant
member of a rodent group previously believed to have gone
extinct 11 million years ago. Our lack of basic information
is made more pressing by the severe threats from human-induced
impacts now bearing on the region’s habitats and species.
Land use practices have dramatically lowered the amount of
forested area, which is increasingly being converted to agricultural
areas, and the remaining forests are threatened by sophisticated
hunting and trading practices, which have decimated local
populations and extirpated species from large areas of Indochina.
In addition, small mammals have largely been left out of
regional conservation decision-making processes in favor
of better-known plants and animals.
Beginning in 1998, researchers from the CBC, in collaboration
with scientists and conservation workers from Asia, Europe,
and North America, five sites in Vietnam and Laos. This
work has documented both previously undescribed species and
species recorded for the first time in Vietnam. New descriptions
include two new species of shrew (Chodsigoa caovansunga, Crocidura
kegoensis) and both new genera and species descriptions
for two rats (Saxatilomys paulinae, Tonkinomys
daovantieni). New country records include a shrew
(Blarinella griselda) and the rarely documented
Long-tailed Mole (Scaptonyx fusicauda), previously
known only from central China and the Tibeto-Himalayan region.
The newly described rats are part of a suite of recently
described small mammals (e.g., Hylomys megalotis, L.
aenigmamus) adapted to the harsh, rocky environments
of eroded limestone hills. Although long recognized as centers
of plant, invertebrate, and bat diversity, these new discoveries
indicate that the isolated karst outcroppings of both Vietnam
and Laos are also home to a unique community of small terrestrial
mammals as well. The CBC’s small mammal surveys also contribute
to conservation decision-making by assessing the health and
integrity of forested ecosystems where large mammal numbers
have been reduced by hunting. Finally, in addition to surveying
regional species diversity, CBC researchers have contributed
to organizing, documenting, and conserving older small mammal
collections held in Vietnam, including the publication of
a taxonomic guide to the country’s rodents.
The CBC has been engaged in research in Mainland Southeast
Asia since 1997, partnering with the Institute for Ecology
and Biological Resources (Hanoi) and dozens of additional
international universities and museums, as well as non-governmental
conservation organizations including the IUCN, World Wildlife
Fund (Greater Mekong Programme), Birdlife International (Indochina),
Fauna and Flora International (Indochina), the Vietnam Environmental
Network, and Wildlife Conservation Society (Lao PDR). |