Viverridae is a family of small to medium-sized feliform , comprising 14 genera with 33 species. This family was named and first described by John Edward Gray in 1821. Viverrids occur all over Africa, in southern Europe, and in South Asia and Southeast Asia on both sides of the Wallace Line.
The species of the subfamily Genettinae are known as genets and oyans. The viverrids of the subfamily Viverrinae are commonly called civets; the Paradoxurinae and most Hemigalinae species are called palm civets.
Viverrids are the most primitive of all the families of Feliformia Carnivora and clearly less specialized than the Felidae. In external characteristics, they are distinguished from the Felidae by the longer muzzle and tuft of facial vibrissae between the lower jaw bones, and by the shorter limbs and the five-toed hind foot with the first digit present. The skull differs by the position of the postpalatine foramina on the maxilla, almost always well in advance of the maxillopalatine suture, and usually about the level of the second premolar; and by the distinct external division of the auditory bulla into its two elements either by a definite groove or, when rarely this is obliterated, by the depression of the tympanic bone in front of the swollen entotympanic. The typical dentition is: , but the number may be reduced, although never to the same extent as in the Felidae.
Their flesh-shearing carnassial teeth are relatively undeveloped compared to those of other feliform carnivorans. Most viverrid species have a penis bone (a baculum).
In 1833, Edward Turner Bennett described the Malagasy fossa ( Cryptoprocta ferox) and subordinated the Cryptoprocta to the Viverridae. A molecular and morphological analysis based on DNA/DNA hybridization experiments suggests that Cryptoprocta does not belong within Viverridae, but is a member of the Eupleridae.
The African palm civet ( Nandinia binotata) resembles the civets of the Viverridae, but is genetically distinct and belongs in its own monotypic family, the Nandiniidae. There is little dispute that the Poiana species are viverrids.
DNA analysis based on 29 species, comprising 13 Viverrinae species and three species representing Paradoxurus, Paguma and Hemigalinae, confirmed Pocock's assumption that the African linsang Poiana represents the sister group of the genus Genetta. The placement of Prionodon as the sister group of the family Felidae is strongly supported, and it was proposed that the Asiatic linsangs be placed in the monogeneric family Prionodontidae.
Classification
Living species
Family Viverridae Viverricula Small Indian civet ( V. indica) Civettictis African civet ( C. civetta) Hemigalus Banded palm civet ( H. derbyanus) Cynogale Otter civet ( C. bennettii) Diplogale Hose's palm civet ( D. hosei) Macrogalidia Sulawesi palm civet ( M. musschenbroekii) Chrotogale Owston's palm civet ( C. owstoni) Arctictis Binturong ( A. binturong) Paguma Masked palm civet ( P. larvata) Arctogalidia Small-toothed palm civet ( A. trivirgata) Poiana
Phylogeny
Extinct species
Viverrinae Viverra Viverra leakeyi ( V. leakeyi) Semigenetta
Paradoxurinae Kichechia Tugenictis † T. ngororaensis Kanuites † K. lewisae Siamictis Grohé et al., 2020 † S. carbonensis Grohé et al., 2020
See also
External links
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