<documentid="599FDC4710FEFCC0A556F24DF1EE1703"ID-DOI="10.5281/zenodo.5414895"ID-ISSN="0003-0090"IM.bibliography_approvedBy="felipe"IM.illustrations_approvedBy="felipe"IM.materialsCitations_approvedBy="felipe"IM.metadata_approvedBy="felipe"IM.tables_requiresApprovalFor="GgImagineBatch"IM.taxonomicNames_approvedBy="felipe"IM.treatmentCitations_approvedBy="felipe"IM.treatments_approvedBy="felipe"checkinTime="1718827980402"checkinUser="felipe"docAuthor="Voss, Robert S., Fleck, David W. & Jansa, Sharon A."docDate="2019"docId="03957B0FFF84FFEBFD125CA0FBA9F91E"docLanguage="en"docName="BulAmeMusNatHis.2024.466.1-179.pdf"docOrigin="Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2024 (466)"docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5414895"docStyle="DocumentStyle:25EFC9A7B3A675566A5530656FFE3DF4.1:BulAmeMusNatHis.2000-2010.chapters"docStyleId="25EFC9A7B3A675566A5530656FFE3DF4"docStyleName="BulAmeMusNatHis.2000-2010.chapters"docStyleVersion="1"docTitle="Amphinectomys savamis Malygin 1994"docType="treatment"docVersion="2"lastPageNumber="40"masterDocId="FFAC0377FFA3FFCCFFF15872FF83FFD7"masterDocTitle="Mammalian Diversity And Matses Ethnomammalogy In Amazonian Peru Part 5. Rodents"masterLastPageNumber="180"masterPageNumber="1"pageNumber="40"updateTime="1718834174618"updateUser="ExternalLinkService"zenodo-license-document="CC-BY-4.0">
<bibRefCitationid="EFADB7E8FF84FFEBFC015CA0FB06FB3D"author="Malygin, V. M. & V. M. Aniskin & S. I. Isaev & A. N. Milishnikov"box="[1008,1157,1234,1258]"pageId="39"pageNumber="40"pagination="195 - 208"refId="ref88657"refString="Malygin, V. M., V. M. Aniskin, S. I. Isaev, and A. N. Milishnikov. 1994. Amphinectomys savamis Malygin gen. et sp. N., a new genus and a new species of water rat (Cricetidae, Rodentia) from Peruvian Amazonia. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal 73: 195 - 208. [in Russian]"type="journal article"year="1994">Malygin 1994</bibRefCitation>
<figureCitationid="1307D69CFF84FFEBFCA55D76FB96FACB"box="[852,1045,1284,1308]"captionStart="FIG"captionStartId="40.[108,150,1455,1476]"captionTargetBox="[108,1212,224,1429]"captionTargetId="figure-11@40.[108,1212,224,1429]"captionTargetPageId="40"captionText="FIG. 18. Dorsal and ventral cranial views of Amphinectomys savamis (A, D; ROM 118905), Nectomys apicalis (B, E; AMNH 273135), and N. rattus (C, F; AMNH 231148). The skulls of A. savamis and N. rattus are not from the Yavarí-Ucayali interfluve. All views about ×1.5."pageId="39"pageNumber="40">Figures 18A, 18D</figureCitation>
), and a species of arboreal rat that we have not been able to capture. The latter is described by the Matses as having reddish dorsal fur and a white belly, traits that do not quite fit any species known or expected to occur in the region. The magical properties attributed to yama rats were described by
<bibRefCitationid="EFADB7E8FF84FFEBFC805EC4FBA5F91E"author="Voss, R. S. & D. W. Fleck & S. A. Jansa"box="[881,1062,1718,1737]"pageId="39"pageNumber="40"pagination="1 - 87"refId="ref93568"refString="Voss, R. S., D. W. Fleck, and S. A. Jansa. 2019. Mammalian diversity and Matses ethnomammalogy in Amazonian Peru. Part 3: Marsupials (Didelphimorphia). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 432: 1 - 87."type="journal article"year="2019">Voss et al. (2019: 34)</bibRefCitation>