Eastern voalavo
The eastern voalavo is a rodent in the family Nesomyidae which occurs in the Anjozorobe forest of eastern Madagascar. Although surveys before 2002 failed to record the species, it is common in some places. However, it is threatened by habitat loss because of slash-and-burn agriculture. The species was formally described in 2005 and is most closely related to the only other species of Voalavo, the northern voalavo from northern Madagascar.
The two species of Voalavo are only subtly different in morphology. With a body mass of, the eastern voalavo is a small rodent. It has a longer tail than the northern voalavo, as well as a longer rostrum and diastema, but shorter molar rows. The two species also differ in details of the configuration of the palate.
Taxonomy
It was first recorded in 2002, when three individuals were captured in Madagascar's Anjozorobe forest. In 2005, the species was formally described by Steven Goodman and colleagues as Voalavo antsahabensis, the second species in the genus Voalavo. The only previously known species, the northern voalavo, occurs further to the north, in the Northern Highlands. The sequences of the cytochrome b gene differ by about 10% in these two species. The specific name, antsahabensis, derives from the name of the village of Antsahabe, which is near the place where the holotype was found. The common name "Eastern Voalavo" has been used for this species.Description
Species of Voalavo are small rodents with a delicate skull and without a tuft at the tip of the tail. The eastern voalavo is similar to the northern voalavo and differs only in subtle characters. The tail is shorter in the eastern voalavo, but the head and body is slightly longer, as is the ear. However, the latter two apparent contrasts may be the result of differences in measurement technique. In both species, the final of the tail are covered with white hairs. In three specimens of eastern voalavo, head and body length ranges from, tail length is, hindfoot length, ear length, and body mass.In the skull, it has a significantly longer rostrum and diastema. Furthermore, it has shorter molar rows in both the upper and lower jaws. The back end of the incisive foramina, which is located in front of the first molars, is rounded in eastern voalavo, but angular in northern voalavo. The sutures of the maxillary and palatine bones are straight and parallel to each other, the toothrows, and the midline of the skull in eastern voalavo. Northern voalavo, in contrast, are more curved. Statistical analysis of measurements of the skull and teeth clearly separates the two species of Voalavo.