Occurrence of the Madras Tree Shrew Anathana ellioti ( Waterhouse ) ( Scandentia : Tupaiidae ) in the Biligirirangan Hills , Karnataka , India

1 Post-graduate Program in Wildlife Biology & Conservation, Wildlife Conservation Society India Program & National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bangalore, Karnataka, India 2 Vivekananda Girijana Kalyana Kendra, BR Hills, Karnataka 571441, India 3 261, 9th Cross, Tatanagar, Karnataka 560092, India 4 #1288, 17th Cross, 7th Sector, HSR Layout, Bangalore, Karnataka 560034, India 5 Jungle Lodges & Resorts, MG Road, Bangalore, Karnataka 560001, India 6 #47, 1st phase, 4th main, Girinagar, Bangalore, Karnataka 560085, India 7 # 218, 9th Main, Arakere MICO layout I stage, Bannerghatta Road, Bangalore, Karnataka 560076, India 8 Hudikeri village hand post, South Coorg, Karnataka 571249, India 9 No. 52, Curley Street, Richmond Town, Bangalore, Karnataka 560025, India 10 Jungle Lodges & Resorts, K Gudi, Chamarajanagar, Mysore, Karnataka, India Email: 1 umesh.srinivasan@gmail.com; 2 prashanth.ns@gmail.com (corresponding author); 3 lshyamal@gmail.com; 4 kalyan@rtns.org; 5 papilio@vsnl.com; 6 svellal@gmail.com; 7 giricavale@gmail.com; 8 mandil47@yahoo.co.in; 9 philip_ross@hotmail.com JoTT NOTE 1(5): 283-286

The Madras Tree Shrew Anathana ellioti (Waterhouse 1850), also referred to as the Indian Tree Shrew, is a small mammal belonging to the order Scandentia, and is endemic to peninsular India.It is distributed "both in the dry and moist deciduous forests of peninsular India, south of the Ganges" (Prater 1971), to Bihar in the east, and the Satpuras in the west, up to an altitude of 1400m ASL (Menon 2003).Tree Shrews are small mammals native to tropical forests of South and South-East Asia and constitute two families (Tupaiidae and Ptilocercidae) under the Order Scandentia (IUCN 1995).Their earlier classification under Insectivora is no longer viable and the creation of a separate order is supported by recent molecular evidence (Schmitz et al. 2000).They are closely related to primates and form one of the four superordinal clades along with rodents, primates and flying lemurs (Murphy et al. 2001).Scandentia along with Lagomorpha form the cohort Glires, a sister group of primates (Schmitz et al. 2000).The genus Anathana is monotypic with A. ellioti being the only species in this genus.
More detailed information on the distribution of this species in India is mostly in the form of short notes on sight records (e.g.George 1989;Shrivastava 1995;Gupta 1996, Pradhan 1997).Karthikeyan (1992) presents the results of a detailed study of the species in Yercaud and summarises the distribution of the species from various locations in the following states: Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Uttar Pradesh (near Monghyr) and Tamil Nadu (Fig. 1).The species has so far not been recorded from the state of Karnataka.Molur et al. (2005) show a record from southern Karnataka; however, no details of any published information from the state are included.The sightings of A. ellioti from Yercaud (Karthikeyan 1992) are geographically the most proximate sightings of the species from BR Hills.
Information on the ecology and activity patterns of this species is scanty, with only one relatively detailed study from Yercaud, Tamil Nadu (Karthikeyan 1992(Karthikeyan , 2001)).Current threats to this species across its range have been identified as habitat loss due to plantations, denudation for agriculture, small-scale logging and clear-cutting, in addition to mortality due to road kills, hunting and local harvest for medicinal use (Karthikeyan 1992& Molur et al. 2005).The IUCN Red Data List classifies it as Near Threatened (NT), with "major threats affecting its habitat and/or population." Over the past four years, several observers have sighted this species from the Biligiri Rangaswamy Temple Wildlife Sanctuary (BRTWLS), or BR Hills (77 0 -77 0 16'E & 11 0 47'-12 0 9'N, 540km 2 ) in Chamarajanagar district, souther n Karnataka.BR Hills consists of roughly four parallel hill ranges (600m to 1816m ASL) running north-south, and supports several vegetation types -moist and dry deciduous forest (61.1%), scrub (28.2%), grassland (3.4%), evergreen forest (6.1%), and shola (0.8%) (Ramesh 1989).These records represent the first reports of the sighting of this species in BR Hills, and possibly Karnataka, and a significant range extension of the Madras Tree Shrew.A previous faunal survey of the area (Srinivasa et al. 1997) did not report the species.RC Morris, a coffee-planter and estate owner in BR Hills in the mid 1900s with a keen interest in natural history, and several articles on the wildlife of the area in the Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society also did not report the presence of the tree shrew.Interviews with some members of the local Sholaga tribe indicated that they do not possess any traditional knowledge of this species, although this needs to be more formally investigated.Details of the sightings (in chronological order) are provided in Table 1.Photographs of three individuals by the authors corresponding to sighting number 5, 6 and 9 (Table 1) are presented (Images 1, 2 & 3) The location of these sightings are separated by a distance of at least 3km.
The first sighting was from Basavanakadu in 2003.Subsequently frequent trips were undertaken to this area Based on published records in George (1989), Shrivastava (1995), Pradhan (1997), Tiwari et al. (2002), Srinivasulu et al. (2004) and Chakraborty (2005).resulting in two further sightings in 2004.In 2006, a photo of the species was obtained further south, leading to subsequent sightings (No. 6,7,8 & 9) around that area.Apart from sightings 3 & 9, where there was a special effort undertaken to look for the species, all others were opportunistic in nature.The present sightings are clustered in two areas in the sanctuary -one cluster around the BR Hills settlement (Nos.1-4) and another around K Gudi (Nos.5-9) (Fig. 2).This is perhaps because of the opportunistic nature of the sightings and lack of a systematic survey for the species.On most occasions, individual(s) were sighted on the ground for brief periods of time, and apart from identifying the species, additional observations could not be made.Sighting numbers 01 and 05 were of single individuals crossing the BR Hills-Chamarajanagar main road.Identification was based on the squirrel-like body shape with a long pointed snout, russet-brown colour with grayish fore-parts, and absence of stripes.Photographic evidence (Image 1) was first obtained from Yemmegadde Pala and subsequently from K Gudi (Image 2) and Durgur Road (Image 3).Sighting number 07 was of two individuals.One of them was seen up a Terminalia tree, approximately 5-6 feet from the ground, exploring a cavity in the tree trunk.While one individual quickly got down to the ground and disappeared into the undergrowth, the other lingered on the tree for about a minute or so basking in the early morning winter sun before following suit.The latest sighting (number 09, Image 3) was for about 5 min.Although the animal was seen actively moving about between Terminalia trees, it was never seen climbing any of them.It moved quickly, never staying still at any location, actively foraging under the leaf litter and peeling the bark off a dead tree trunk with its forelimbs.
The above nine observations of the species and the photographs indicate the presence of the species in BR Hills, raising the possibility of its presence in the contiguous hill ranges which share similar habitat features.The MM Hills Reserve Forest situated between Yercaud and BR Hills is likely to be a potential habitat.Although, direct contiguity is only through a few surviving forest fragments in and around Perumbalai, Thoppur and Bommiampetti, the presence of the species in BR Hills raises the possibility of the species in MM Hills Reserve Forest and the other contiguous forest areas -Bandipur, Cauvery Wildlife Sanctuary and MM Hills Reserve Forests of Karnataka and the Satyamangalam range in Tamil Nadu.The species is yet to be reported from these areas.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Locations of sightings of Madras Tree Shrew Anathana ellioti in BR Hills.The numbers refer to the sighting locations in Table 1.Inset shows the location of BR Hills in southern India.Map credits: Google Maps through India Biodiversity Portal (http://indiabiodiversityportal.org)