The occurrence of insectivores (Mammalia, Eulipotyphla) in Georgia from 1864 through to 2022

Biodivers Data J. 2023 Jul 11:11:e106256. doi: 10.3897/BDJ.11.e106256. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Background: Of the 108 species that occur in Georgia, ten species are insectivores belonging to the order Eulipotyphla. Forty percent of them are endemic to the Caucasus and sixty percent are endemic to the Middle East, including the Caucasus. Up to now, no comprehensive data on the distribution of insectivores in Georgia have been available.The aggregated standardised data on the occurrence of small mammals can be applied to resource management, biogeography, ecological and systematic studies and to the planning of nature conservation efforts. Hereafter, the attempt to provide accumulated in one paper all known points of insectivores' occurrence in Georgia and make it available to researchers via the open repository GBIF is presented.The dataset is based on both literature data from 30 published sources (251 records), collection vouchers from four main zoological collections containing vouchers from Georgia (415 records) and authors' fieldwork results (217 records). The occurrence points of the specimens stored in collections and museums have been extracted from museum voucher labels and museum journals.

New information: All known sampling points of insectivores in Georgia are collected in one dataset for the first time. Our field surveillance data reach about 24.6% of the records. Most of our data collected since 2003 have not been published yet. About 28.4% of the records have been recovered from publications in Russian and Georgian languages and 47% of the dataset records are derived from collections.

Keywords: Caucasus; Eulipotyphla; Georgia; biodiversity; mammals; museum collection; occurrence records; species distribution.

Grants and funding

The study was supported by the Defense Thread Reduction Agency (DTRA) as a part of the BAA project entitled “Preparation of the Atlas of Zoonotic Infections in South Caucasus” (HDTRA1-19-1-0044).This work was supported by the Shota Rustaveli National Foundation of Georgia (SRNSFG) [FR-19-2295