An Introduction to Marmosops (Marsupialia: Didelphidae), with the Description of a New Species from Bolivia and Notes on the Taxonomy and Distribution of Other Bolivian Forms
Author
VOSS, ROBERT S.
Author
TARIFA, TERESA
Author
YENSEN, ERIC
text
American Museum Novitates
2004
2004-12-30
3466
1
40
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282004%29466%3C0001%3AAITMMD%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
3781
10.1206/0003-0082(2004)466<0001:AITMMD>2.0.CO;2
b3293c54-11ba-43d8-8c3c-243a8c05d6cd
0003-0082
4735089
Marmosops bishopi
This appears to be the appropriate name for Bolivian specimens of the
Marmosops parvidens
group, of which we have examined eight examples from widely scattered localities in
Beni, Cochabamba, La Paz
, and
Santa Cruz
(fig. 10). These are all very small animals (
table 7
) with much shorter molar series (LM
³
5.8 mm) than any other Bolivian congener. The skulls have rounded supraorbital margins that lack distinct beading, shallow postorbital constrictions are dorsally visible, there are no palatine fenestrae, and
the upper canines have small posterior accessory cusps. Although
one adult
male (
MSB
55843) has an almostnaked patch of skin and a streak of redstained fur on the midline of the throat, two others (
CBF 7531
,
LHE 1541
) have no trace of a gular gland. All
three adult
males have welldeveloped, bladelike lateral carpal tubercles, and the scrotum is pale, with white fur and unpigmented skin. None of the females we examined had welldeveloped mammae, so it is not known whether or not this taxon has pectoral teats
.
9
Because
Anderson (1997)
seldom cited museum catalog numbers, we consulted his card file of examined specimens (preserved in the AMNH Department of Mammalogy archives) to determine the empirical basis for mapped collection localities of Bolivian
Marmosops
(
Anderson, 1997
: figs. 493–495).
There
is noteworthy pelage color variation among the material at hand.
All
of the specimens we examined from
Beni, Cochabamba, La Paz
, and western
Santa Cruz
have dull reddishbrown dorsal fur, selfwhitish ventral fur bordered by moreorless distinct lateral zones of graybased hairs, and unicolored tails.
By
contrast, the single available skin from eastern
Santa Cruz
(
LHE 1541
)
10
has pale grayishbrown dorsal fur, selfcream ventral fur (without well defined lateral zones of graybased hairs), and an indistinctly bicolored tail. Despite these pigmental differences, specimens from eastern
Santa Cruz
do not differ from the rest of our Bolivian material in other respects (e.g., measurements and qualitative craniodental traits), and partial cytochrome
b
sequences from representative exemplars (
LHE 1541
and
AMNH 268938
) differ by only about 3.8% (
J.L. Patton
, personal commun.)
.
Specimens that we identify as
Marmosops bishopi
were included among the material that
Anderson (1997)
reported as
M. impavidus
(e.g., UMMZ 156014),
M. noctivagus keaysi
(USNM 579249), and
M. parvidens
(AMNH 268938).
BOLIVIAN SPECIMENS EXAMINED:
Beni
,
1 km
E La Embocada (UMMZ 156014);
Cochabamba
, Cordillera de Mosetenes (CBF 7531);
La Paz
,
Alto Río Madidi (USNM 579249), La Reserva (AMNH 268938);
Santa Cruz
,
El Refugio (LHE 1541, 1553, 1556), San Rafael de Amboró (MSB 55843).