A Revision Of The Didelphid Marsupial Genus Marmosops, Part 1. Species Of The Subgenus Sciophanes
Author
Díaz-Nieto, Juan F.
Author
Voss, Robert S.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2016
2016-05-11
2016
402
1
72
http://www.bioone.org/doi/10.1206/0003-0090-402.1.1
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090-402.1.1
5f10376b-c1d4-42b7-8ee4-d6c4a3472e1e
0003-0090
4612610
Marmosops magdalenae
,
new species
Figures 5C
,
6B
,
25–27
HOLOTYPE
:
ICN
19924
(original number
MRP82
), consisting of the skin and skull of an adult female collected by
Miguel E.
Rodríguez-
Posada
on
18 July 2002
at
Bosque de Roble Cerca de Torre
,
Reserva Biológica Cachalú
(fig. 28: locality 33), vereda
Rionegro
, municipio
Encino
,
Santander
,
Colombia
.
DISTRIBUTION AND SYMPATRY: Examined specimens of
Marmosops magdalenae
are from east of the Río
Magdalena
in northern
Colombia
, where it has been collected between
104 m
and
1940 m
above sea level (fig. 28). Capture habitats include lowland rain forest along the right bank of the Río
Magdalena
(e.g., at Corregimiento Campo Capote [fig. 28: locality 34]) and lower montane moist forest on the western slope of the Cordillera Oriental (e.g., at Reserva Biológica Cachalú [fig. 28: locality 33]; Otálora- Ardila, 2003;
Ávila et al., 2010
). This species is not known to occur sympatrically with any other congener, but at the upper limit of its elevational range it might cooccur with
M. caucae
, a member of the nominotypical subgenus that is widespread in Andean cloud forests (
Díaz-Nieto et al., 2016a
).
DESCRIPTION: Body pelage fuscous to reddish brown (near Dresden Brown) middorsally, indistinctly paler laterally, and about
9 mm
long at midback (based on FMNH 70926); ventral pelage self-white from chin to groin (including the inside surface of the forelimbs and sometimes also the hind limbs), but midventral band of self-white fur narrowed by lateral zones of gray-based abdominal hairs (sometimes with brownish tips) on abdomen. Manus covered dorsally with uniformly pale fur, without pigmental contrast between the metacarpal and digital pelage; lateral carpal tuber- cles bladelike in all examined adult males. Mammary formula unknown.
17
Tail longer than combined length of head and body (mean LT/ HBL × 100 = 125%–130%), indistinctly bicolored, and somewhat paler distally than proximally (but not distinctly particolored).
Nasals not very long (usually not extending posteriorly behind lacrimals) and much wider posteriorly than anteriorly (laterally expanded at the maxillary-frontal suture). Lacrimal foramina concealed from lateral view inside anterior orbital margin; zygomatic process of squamosal broadly overlapped dorsally by jugal. Palatine fenestrae consistently present and large. Dorsolateral margin of ethmoid foramen usually formed by the frontal.
Upper canines short, with posterior accessory cusps in both sexes (anterior accessory cusps consistently absent in all examined material). Upper third molar (M3) anterolabial cingulum narrowly continuous with preprotocrista (anterior cingulum complete). Lower canine (c1) premolariform (procumbent, with posterior accessory cusp) and small, subequal in height to p1; c1 anterolingual accessory cusp absent or indistinct. Entoconid of m1 shorter than adjacent m2 paraconid; unworn m4 talonid usually with only two distinct cusps.
COMPARISONS: Comparisons between
Marmosops magdalenae
and other species of the Bishopi Group have already been provided in the preceding accounts.
ETYMOLOGY: For the Río
Magdalena
, economically and culturally the most important river of
Colombia
, and a well-known dispersal barrier for the terrestrial vertebrate fauna of northwestern South America (
Chapman, 1917
;
Gutiérrez-Pinto et al., 2012
).
REMARKS: The material that we refer to
Marmosops magdalenae
was previously identified in
17
The skin tag of
ICN 19924
mentions the presence of “6 mamas,” but no mammary formula was provided. We inspected the skin of this specimen and found 6 teats in the arrangement 3–1–2. Because no species of
Marmosops
is known to have unpaired lateral mammae it seems probable that additional mammae are normally present in this species.
the literature as
Marmosa parvidens
by
Pine (1981)
, as
Marmosops parvidens
by Díaz-N. et al. (2011), and as
Marmosops
“East
Magdalena
” by
Díaz-Nieto et al. (2016a)
.
SPECIMENS EXAMINED (
N
= 3):
Colombia
—
Boyacá
,
Muzo
(
FMNH 70926
)
;
Huila
, near
San Adolfo
(
FMNH 70927
,
70928
)
;
Santander
,
Encino
(
ICN
19924
), Puerto Parra (
ICN
18788
)
.