An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae)
Author
Voss, Robert S.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2022
2022-04-04
2022
455
1
77
https://bioone.org/journals/bulletin-of-the-american-museum-of-natural-history/volume-455/issue-1/0003-0090.455.1.1/An-Annotated-Checklist-of-Recent-Opossums-Mammalia-Didelphidae/10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1.full
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1
0003-0090
Metachirus myosuros
(Temminck, 1824)
TYPE MATERIAL:
NMW
B-2589, the
lectotype
(designated by
Pohle, 1927
), consists of the skin and skull of a juvenile female collected at “Ypanema” (= Ipanema:
23.43° S
,
47.60° W
;
950 m
),
São Paulo state
,
Brazil
.
SYNONYMS:
antioquiae
J.A. Allen, 1916;
bolivianus
J.A. Allen, 1901;
colombianus
J.A. Allen, 1900;
dentaneus
Goldman, 1912;
imbutus
Thomas, 1923;
infuscus
Thomas, 1923;
modestus
Thomas, 1923;
personatus
Miranda-Ribeiro, 1936;
phaeurus
Thomas, 1901;
tschudii
J.A. Allen, 1900.
DISTRIBUTION: As currently understood (
Voss et al., 2019
),
Metachirus myosuros
ranges from southern
Mexico
possibly throughout the humid lowlands of Central America to South America (Mérida and Cruz, 2015: fig. 2); however, there are curiously large gaps with no recorded specimens from some parts of Central America (e.g., the Atlantic lowlands of
Costa Rica
). In South America, specimens are known from the humid trans-Andean lowlands of western
Colombia
and western
Ecuador
and from most of the tropical and subtropical cis-Andean lowlands (except the northeastern quadrant of Amazonia and the Tocantins-Xingu interfluve; see above and below) to
Bolivia
, eastern
Paraguay
, and northern
Argentina
. There are, unfortunately, no maps that adequately illustrate the South American distribution of this species: Gardner and Dagosto’s (2008) map does not distinguish records of
M. myosuros
from those of
M. nudicaudatus
, and Voss et al.’s (2019) map only shows collection localities for sequenced specimens.
REMARKS: See
Voss et al. (2019)
for illustrations, measurements, and morphological comparisons with
Metachirus nudicaudatus
. Phylogenetic analyses of cytochrome
b
sequence data suggest the existence of distinct haplogroups of
M. myosuros
in (1) Central America, (2) northwestern Amazonia, (3) southwestern Amazonia, and (4) the Atlantic Forest of southeastern
Brazil
(
Voss et al., 2019
). However, despite modestly large sequence divergence among these populations (5.3%–7.6%, uncorrected), there appear to be no consistent phenotypic differences among representative specimens. Therefore, whether these haplogroups represent cryptic taxa or merely geographic variation in mtDNA among populations of a single widespread species remains to be determined.