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<document id="27CC1E7A2F45BBEE5A98537B9503EC2F" ID-DOI="10.5281/zenodo.6685333" ID-GBIF-Dataset="b488d6b0-2108-4c9b-ba79-458efc034cf9" ID-ISBN="978-84-96553-99-6" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6685333" IM.illustrations_approvedBy="tatiana" IM.materialsCitations_approvedBy="tatiana" IM.metadata_approvedBy="tatiana" IM.taxonomicNames_approvedBy="tatiana" checkinTime="1655902366516" checkinUser="tatiana" docAuthor="Astúa, D." docDate="2015" docId="F723B76CFFCAFFE1FA1E1501F5E680B9" docLanguage="en" docName="hbmw_5_Didelphidae_0070.pdf.imf" docOrigin="Handbook of the Mammals of the World Volume 5 Monotremes and Marsupials, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions" docTitle="Thylamys macrurus" docType="treatment" docVersion="8" lastPageNumber="178" masterDocId="0B1ACF14FFFBFFD0FFAB161FFFFD8C61" masterDocTitle="Didelphidae" masterLastPageNumber="186" masterPageNumber="129" pageNumber="178" updateTime="1720181789988" updateUser="tatiana">
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<mods:title id="44D96FF3E3E235200B54E639CAB0A9E7">Didelphidae</mods:title>
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<mods:namePart id="A1520308DFF48E949FB928BC3AE513C1">Astúa, D.</mods:namePart>
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<mods:namePart id="92749FC836FD4AD09B474851E3728E11">Russel A. Mittermeier</mods:namePart>
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<mods:namePart id="157979F1C2299BA78B8CD929FC18F7DB">Don E. Wilson</mods:namePart>
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<mods:title id="F0913D63F144CE1094376E9A85B39622">Handbook of the Mammals of the World Volume 5 Monotremes and Marsupials</mods:title>
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<treatment id="F723B76CFFCAFFE1FA1E1501F5E680B9" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6685034" ID-GBIF-Taxon="196400694" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6685034" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:F723B76CFFCAFFE1FA1E1501F5E680B9" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/F723B76CFFCAFFE1FA1E1501F5E680B9" lastPageNumber="178" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA1E1501FA138F2D" box="[1461,1518,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="multiple">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA1E1501FA138F2D" blockId="49.[1459,2662,798,924]" box="[1461,1518,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<heading id="247DB116FFCAFFE1FA1E1501FA138F2D" box="[1461,1518,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<figureCitation id="E7B11AFFFFCAFFE1FA1E1501FA138F2D" box="[1461,1518,798,844]" captionStart="Plate 9: Didelphidae" captionStartId="52.[93,123,3341,3366]" captionTargetBox="[11,2715,14,3642]" captionTargetPageId="45" captionText="76. Patagonian Opossum (Lestodelphys halli), 77. Karimis Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys karimii), 78. Dwarf Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys velutinus), 79. Elegant Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys elegans), 80. Pallid Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys pallidior), 81. Tate's Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys tatei), 82. Mesopotamian Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys citellus), 83. Dry Chaco Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys pulchellus), 84. Chacoan Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys pusillus), 85. Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys macrurus), 86. Argentine Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys sponsorius), 87. Buff-bellied Fat-tailed Opossum (Thylamys venustus), 88. Bishop's Slender Opossum (Marmosops bishop), 89. Junin Slender Opossum (Marmosops juninensis), 90. Delicate Slender Opossum (Marmosops parvidens), 91. Pantepui Slender Opossum (Marmosops pakaraimae), 92. Pinheiros Slender Opossum (Marmosops pinheiroi), 93. Handleys Slender Opossum (Marmosops handleyi), 94. Gray Slender Opossum (Marmosops incanus), 95. Brazilian Slender Opossum (Marmosops paulensis), 96. Neblina Slender Opossum (Marmosops neblina), 97. Tschudis Slender Opossum (Marmosops impavidus), 98. Spectacled Slender Opossum (Marmosops ocellatus), 99. Creightons Slender Opossum (Marmosops creightoni), 100. White-bellied Slender Opossum (Marmosops noctivagus), 101. Narrow-headed Slender Opossum (Marmosops cracens), 102. Dusky Slender Opossum (Marmosops fuscatus), 103. Panama Slender Opossum (Marmosops invictus)" figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6685612" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/6685612/files/figure.png" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">85.</figureCitation>
</heading>
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<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA541501F7728F2D" box="[1535,2191,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="vernacular_names">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA541501F7728F2D" blockId="49.[1459,2662,798,924]" box="[1535,2191,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<heading id="247DB116FFCAFFE1FA541501F7728F2D" box="[1535,2191,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<vernacularName id="F1897654FFCAFFE1FA541501F7728F2D" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[1535,2191,798,844]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" language="eng" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum</vernacularName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1F7761501F5C48F2D" box="[2269,2617,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1F7761501F5C48F2D" blockId="49.[1459,2662,798,924]" box="[2269,2617,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<heading id="247DB116FFCAFFE1F7761501F5C48F2D" box="[2269,2617,798,844]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<taxonomicName id="B88A7DF9FFCAFFE1F7761501F5C48F2D" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[2269,2617,798,844]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1F7761501F5C48F2D" box="[2269,2617,798,844]" italics="true" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Thylamys macrurus</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA1F1541F5AD8FFA" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="vernacular_names">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA1F1541F59B8F12" blockId="49.[1459,2662,798,924]" box="[1460,2662,862,883]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<heading id="247DB116FFCAFFE1FA1F1541F59B8F12" box="[1460,2662,862,883]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA1F1541FA008F12" bold="true" box="[1460,1533,862,883]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">French:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="F1897654FFCAFFE1F9AD1541F8FD8F12" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[1542,1792,862,883]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" language="fra" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">Opossum a longue queue</vernacularName>
/
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1F8B81541F8968F12" bold="true" box="[1811,1899,862,883]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">German:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="F1897654FFCAFFE1F8DF1541F74C8F12" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[1908,2225,862,883]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" language="deu" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">Paraguay-Fettschwanzbeutelratte</vernacularName>
/
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1F76F1541F6E08F12" bold="true" box="[2244,2333,862,883]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Spanish:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="F1897654FFCAFFE1F68D1541F59B8F12" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[2342,2662,862,883]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" language="esp" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">Marmosa coligruesa de Paraguay</vernacularName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA1F1599F5AD8FFA" blockId="49.[1459,2662,798,924]" box="[1460,2640,902,923]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<heading id="247DB116FFCAFFE1FA1F1599F5AD8FFA" box="[1460,2640,902,923]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA1F1599F95A8FFA" bold="true" box="[1460,1703,902,923]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Other common names:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="F1897654FFCAFFE1F91B1599F81E8FFA" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[1712,2019,902,923]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" language="eng" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">Long-tailed Fat-tailed Opossum</vernacularName>
,
<vernacularName id="F1897654FFCAFFE1F85A1599F6898FFA" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[2033,2420,902,923]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" language="eng" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">Paraguayan Fat-tailed Mouse Opossum</vernacularName>
,
<vernacularName id="F1897654FFCAFFE1F6281599F5AD8FFA" ID-CoL="7BY4H" baseAuthorityName="Olfers" baseAuthorityYear="1818" box="[2435,2640,902,923]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" language="eng" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrurus">Paraguayan Thylamys</vernacularName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1F7BC15D3F59B8F88" box="[2071,2662,972,1001]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="reference_group">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1F7BC15D3F59B8F88" blockId="49.[2071,2665,972,1395]" box="[2071,2662,972,1001]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1F7BC15D3F74E8F88" bold="true" box="[2071,2227,972,1001]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Taxonomy.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="B88A7DF9FFCAFFE1F71515D3F59F8F88" authority="Olfers, 1818" authorityName="Olfers" authorityYear="1818" box="[2238,2658,972,1001]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Didelphys" kingdom="Animalia" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="macrura">Didelphys macrura Olfers, 1818</taxonomicName>
,
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1F7B215EFF64788E6" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="materials_examined">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1F7B215EFF64788E6" blockId="49.[2071,2665,972,1395]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<materialsCitation id="CFE20C27FFCAFFE1F7B215EFF64788E6" ID-GBIF-Occurrence="3819445406" country="Paraguay" location="Twenty-eight kilometers SW Pedro Juan Caballero" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" specimenCount="1" stateProvince="Anambay">
“Stidamerica.” Restricted by R.S. Voss and colleagues in 2009 to “
<location id="7A5550A1FFCAFFE1F6C71208F60A883E" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:F723B76CFFCAFFE1FA1E1501F5E680B9:7A5550A1FFCAFFE1F6C71208F60A883E" country="Paraguay" name="Twenty-eight kilometers SW Pedro Juan Caballero" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" stateProvince="Anambay">Twenty-eight kilometers SW Pedro Juan Caballero</location>
, Departamento
<collectingRegion id="BD4EC898FFCAFFE1F73D1275F6E788E6" box="[2198,2330,1130,1159]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Anambay</collectingRegion>
,
<collectingCountry id="079D46EAFFCAFFE1F6811275F65188E6" box="[2346,2476,1130,1159]" name="Paraguay" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Paraguay</collectingCountry>
.”
</materialsCitation>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1F7B3128EF67F88CF" box="[2072,2434,1169,1198]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="reference_group">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1F7B3128EF67F88CF" blockId="49.[2071,2665,972,1395]" box="[2072,2434,1169,1198]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">This species is monotypic.</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1F7B312A6F6C4889C" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="distribution">
<caption id="2BF556F2FFCAFFE1F7B312A6F6C4889C" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6685541" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6685541" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/6685541/files/figure.png" inLine="true" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" targetBox="[1457,2048,975,1389]" targetPageId="49">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1F7B312A6F6C4889C" blockId="49.[2071,2665,972,1395]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1F7B312A6F73588B7" bold="true" box="[2072,2248,1209,1238]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Distribution.</emphasis>
S Brazil (Mato Grosso do Sul) and E Paraguay.
</paragraph>
</caption>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1F7BC131BF5ED84CE" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="description">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1F7BC131BF5ED84CE" blockId="49.[2071,2665,972,1395]" lastBlockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1F7BC131BF6D08944" bold="true" box="[2071,2349,1284,1317]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Descriptive notes.</emphasis>
Head-body 10.1-13.5 cm, tail 13.2-15.4 cm; weight 30-57 g. The Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum is the largest species in the genus. Its dorsal fur is grayish overall, with conspicuous tricolored pattern. Mid-dorsal fur is dark grayish or grayish-brown, with four-color banded cover hairs that are gray at bases, then dark brown, then creamy, and dark at tips. Guard hairs are longer, and gray-based with dark or white tips. Fur on body sides 1s pale gray, similar to mid-dorsal fur but paler. Head is the same color as middorsal fur; mid-rostral fur is pale gray, with a distinct gray line of tricolored, gray-based white hairs with black tips. There is white-based dark-tipped fur in front of ears and above eyes, and there are dark, narrow eye-rings that extend slightly toward nose but not toward ears. Tail length is c.120% of head-body length, and tail is basally furred for 10 mm, bicolored proximally (grayish dorsally and whitish ventrally), and entirely white on distal one-third to one-fifth. Tail can store fat (become incrassated), although tail fat is much less apparent on the Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum than in other species of
<taxonomicName id="B88A7DF9FFCAFFE1F90B1149F8E58B12" box="[1696,1816,1878,1907]" class="Mammalia" family="Didelphidae" genus="Thylamys" kingdom="Animalia" order="Didelphimorphia" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">Thylamys</taxonomicName>
. Ventral fur is creamy white from chin to anus, with narrow (less than 3 mm) lateral bands of gray-based hairs. Throat gland is present in both sexes. Fur is dense, short (5-6 mm) ventrally and longer (9-10 mm) dorsally, with even longer (11-12 mm) guard hairs. Feet are large and whitish, limbs are grayish dorsally (paler on forelimbs than hindlimbs) and creamy-white ventrally, and ears are large, uniformly dark-brownish, and naked. Females lack a pouch, but number of mammae is unknown. The Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum has a 2n = 14, FN = 20 karyotype, with four pairs of biarmed and two pairs of acrocentric autosomes, and with an acrocentric X-chromosome. The Y-chromosome is absent or unknown.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA181EAAF70B852D" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="biology_ecology">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA181EAAF70B852D" blockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA181EAAF9DF84B7" bold="true" box="[1459,1570,2229,2262]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Habitat.</emphasis>
Tall subtropical humid (semi-evergreen) forests in Paraguay and arboreal dense savannas (cerrado sensu stricto) and deciduous and semi-deciduous forests associated with cerrado formations in western Brazil. The Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum seems to be quite a generalist relative to its habitat use.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA181F4CF68A8515" box="[1459,2423,2387,2420]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="food_feeding">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA181F4CF68A8515" blockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" box="[1459,2423,2387,2420]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA181F4CF9458515" bold="true" box="[1459,1720,2387,2420]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Food and Feeding.</emphasis>
There is no information available for this species.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA181F65F83286E9" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="breeding">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA181F65F83286E9" blockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA181F65F9C485FA" bold="true" box="[1459,1593,2426,2459]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Breeding.</emphasis>
Reproductive patterns of the Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum can only be inferred from capture frequencies of individuals in different age classes. In western Brazil, the majority ofjuveniles were captured during the rainy season in November— February, with a single capture of ajuvenile during the dry season in July, which strongly suggested a breeding season associated with the wet season when young are born, weaned, and start to disperse. This was also supported by higher frequency of heavier individuals captured in the dry season.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA1A1C8CF75486B6" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="activity">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA1A1C8CF75486B6" blockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA1A1C8CF96286D1" bold="true" box="[1457,1695,2707,2736]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Activity patterns.</emphasis>
There is no specific information available for this species, but the Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum is probably nocturnal.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA181CC2F7D68715" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="biology_ecology">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA181CC2F7D68715" blockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA181CC2F787869F" bold="true" box="[1459,2170,2781,2814]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Movements, Home range and Social organization.</emphasis>
In western Brazil, the Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum is captured on the ground, or when it is caught in understory traps, there is no difference in use of understory or ground levels. Escape behaviors, however, were more frequent on the ground.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA181D65F6518070" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="conservation">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA181D65F6518070" blockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA181D65F8F087FA" bold="true" box="[1459,1805,2938,2971]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Status and Conservation.</emphasis>
Classified as Near Threatened on The IUCN Red List. The Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum nearly qualifies as Threatened based on inferred population decline due to habitat conversion to agriculture and from logging. In Paraguay, the Paraguayan Fat-tailed Opossum is only known from a few specimens.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="379055F1FFCAFFE1FA181A3EF5E680B9" pageId="49" pageNumber="178" type="bibRefCitation_list">
<paragraph id="7F35067AFFCAFFE1FA181A3EF5E680B9" blockId="49.[1457,2664,1402,3288]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">
<emphasis id="4DFEDA68FFCAFFE1FA181A3EF9B1805B" bold="true" box="[1459,1612,3105,3130]" pageId="49" pageNumber="178">Bibliography.</emphasis>
de Andreazzi et al. (2011), Braun etal. (2005), Caceres, Bornschein et al. (2007), Caceres, Napoli, Casella &amp; Hannibal (2010), Caceres, Napoli &amp; Hannibal (2011), Caceres, Napoli, Lopes et al. (2007), Carmignotto &amp; Monfort (2006), Creighton &amp; Gardner (2007c), Giarla et al. (2010), Hannibal &amp; Caceres (2010), Melo &amp; Sponchiado (2012), Palma, A.R.T. &amp; Vieira (2012), Palma, R.E. (1995), Palma, R.E., Boric-Bargetto et al. (2014), Palma, R.E., Rivera-Milla et al. (2002), Smith (2009c), Solari (2003), Svartman (2009), Voss, Myers et al. (2009).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>