treatments-xml/data/03/9E/01/039E01774BD7D8C4FCF8357AB663FA9F.xml
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<mods:title id="4EBE5DDA33AF3D25FD9DF3F7C1E453EF">Mammals Of The Rio Juruá And The Evolutionary And Ecological Diversification Of Amazonia</mods:title>
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<heading id="D0C0070D4BD7D8C3FCF8357AB3C0F9F4" box="[847,1166,1572,1595]" centered="true" fontSize="9" level="2" pageId="131" pageNumber="132" reason="2">
<taxonomicName id="4C37CBE24BD7D8C3FCF8357AB3C0F9F4" ID-CoL="67QV" authority="Bangs, 1900" authorityName="Bangs" authorityYear="1900" box="[847,1166,1572,1595]" class="Mammalia" family="Cricetidae" genus="Oligoryzomys" kingdom="Animalia" order="Rodentia" pageId="131" pageNumber="132" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="B9436C734BD7D8C3FCF8357AB4BEF9F4" box="[847,1008,1572,1595]" italics="true" pageId="131" pageNumber="132">Oligoryzomys</emphasis>
Bangs, 1900
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<paragraph id="8B88B0614BD7D8C3FC26350EB303F9A8" blockId="131.[913,1101,1616,1639]" box="[913,1101,1616,1639]" pageId="131" pageNumber="132">
<heading id="D0C0070D4BD7D8C3FC26350EB303F9A8" box="[913,1101,1616,1639]" centered="true" fontSize="9" level="2" pageId="131" pageNumber="132" reason="2">Pygmy rice rats</heading>
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<paragraph id="8B88B0614BD7D8C4FCB33522B663FA9F" blockId="131.[743,1271,1660,1741]" lastBlockId="132.[163,692,193,1360]" lastPageId="132" lastPageNumber="133" pageId="131" pageNumber="132">
The pygmy rice rats are a speciose but poorly known group that is widely distributed throughout the Neotropical Realm, from southern
<collectingCountry id="F320F0F14BD0D8C4FEA5339FB625FF17" box="[274,363,193,216]" name="Mexico" pageId="132" pageNumber="133">México</collectingCountry>
to Tierra del Fuego and to eastern Amazonia and the
<taxonomicName id="4C37CBE24BD0D8C4FE553380B5DCFF3A" authority="Atlantica" authorityName="Atlantica" box="[482,658,222,245]" class="Insecta" family="Cicadidae" genus="Mata" kingdom="Animalia" order="Hemiptera" pageId="132" pageNumber="133" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="genus">Mata Atlântica</taxonomicName>
of coastal
<collectingCountry id="F320F0F14BD0D8C4FEB633A2B606FEDC" box="[257,328,252,275]" name="Brazil" pageId="132" pageNumber="133">Brazil</collectingCountry>
(Carleton and Musser, 1989; Emmons and Feer, 1997). Over this enormous range, member species may be common within habitats spanning lowland tropical forest to the high Andean
<emphasis id="B9436C734BD0D8C4FD91322FB52EFE47" box="[550,608,369,392]" italics="true" pageId="132" pageNumber="133">puna</emphasis>
grasslands or
<emphasis id="B9436C734BD0D8C4FEAA32D1B639FE69" box="[285,375,399,422]" italics="true" pageId="132" pageNumber="133">páramo</emphasis>
above timberline. Often placed as a subgenus within
<taxonomicName id="4C37CBE24BD0D8C4FDA432F2B5C9FE0C" box="[531,647,428,451]" class="Mammalia" family="Cricetidae" genus="Oryzomys" kingdom="Animalia" order="Rodentia" pageId="132" pageNumber="133" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="B9436C734BD0D8C4FDA432F2B5C9FE0C" box="[531,647,428,451]" italics="true" pageId="132" pageNumber="133">Oryzomys</emphasis>
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by earlier workers, its generic status was solidified by Carleton and Musser (1989), who provide an emended diagnosis as well as a provisional list of species with generalized descriptions and geographic ranges. Their diagnosis includes, but is not limited to, the following traits: small body size; tail usually longer than head and body; six plantar tubercles, with hypothenar pad small and round; skull small but stout in appearance; rostrum relatively broad and stocky; interorbital region hourglass shaped with squared edges; braincase elongate, smooth, and flat, with foramen magnum directed posteriorly; zygomatic arches bowed laterally; jugal reduced or absent; zygomatic notches distinct; zygomatic plates broad, with the anterior edge reaching the nasolacrimal capsules; stapedial foramen large, posterior opening of alisphenoid canal large, squamosal­alisphenoid groove and sphenofrontal foramen absent (derived cephalic arterial supply; pattern 2 of Voss, 1988; Carleton and Musser, 1989); incisors opisthodont, asulcate; molars brachydont, cuspidate, with three roots in uppers and two in lowers; first molars ovate, anteromedian flexus (­id) shallow, anterolabial and anterolingual conules (­ids) small, anteroloph and mesoloph (­id) present; anterolabial cingulum well developed on lower third molar.
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