Non-marine mammals of Togo (West Africa): an annotated checklist Giovanni AMORI CNR – Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Viale dell’Università, 32, 00185 Rome (Italy)
[email protected] Gabriel Hoinsoude SEGNIAGBETO Département de Zoologie et de Biologie animale, Université de Lomé, Faculté des Sciences, BP 6057 Lomé (Togo)
[email protected] Jan DECHER Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig, Leibniz Institute for Animal Biodiversity, Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn (Germany)
[email protected] Delagnon ASSOU Département de Zoologie et de Biologie animale, Université de Lomé, Faculté des Sciences, BP 6057 Lomé (Togo) Spartaco GIPPOLITI Società Italiana per la Storia della Fauna “G. Altobello”, Viale Liegi 48, 00198 Rome (Italy) Luca LUISELLI Centre of Environmental Studies Demetra, and Niger Delta Ecology, and Biodiversity Conservation Unit, Department of Applied and Environmental Biology, Rivers State University of Science and Technology, PMB 5080, Port Harcourt, Rivers State (Nigeria) Published on 24 June 2016 urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:059171D0-809D-47F5-9030-669522C36E69 Amori G., Segniagbeto G. H., Decher J., Assou D., Gippoliti S. & Luiselli L. 2016. — Non-marine mammals of Togo (West Africa): an annotated checklist. Zoosystema 38 (2): 201-244. http://dx.doi.org/10.5252/z2016n2a3 ABSTRACT Although Togo is a relatively small country in West Africa, it is characterized by a wide variation of vegetation zones ranging from moist forests to arid savannahs, including the “Dahomey Gap”. Th ere has been no comprehensive documentation of the native mammal fauna of Togo since 1893. Our review of the extant and extirpated mammals of Togo includes 178 species, with Chiroptera (52 species) and KEY WORDS Rodentia (47 species) being the most speciose groups.