Published December 31, 2008 | Version v1
Journal article Restricted

Rediscovery and redescription of Marmosa (Stegomarmosa) andersoni Pine (Mammalia: Didelphimorphia: Didelphidae), an endemic Peruvian mouse opossum, with a reassessment of its affinities

Description

Solari, Sergio, Pine, Ronald H. (2008): Rediscovery and redescription of Marmosa (Stegomarmosa) andersoni Pine (Mammalia: Didelphimorphia: Didelphidae), an endemic Peruvian mouse opossum, with a reassessment of its affinities. Zootaxa 1756: 49-61, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.181811

Files

Restricted

The record is publicly accessible, but files are restricted to users with access.

Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

LSID
urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:4021956FD57FFFCE9D4A6343FF93364F
URL
http://publication.plazi.org/id/4021956FD57FFFCE9D4A6343FF93364F

References

  • Alonso, A. & Dallmeier, F. (Eds) (1998) Biodiversity Assessment and Monitoring of the Lower Urubamba Region, Peru: Cashiriari-3 Well Site and the Camisea and Urubamba Rivers. SI/MAB Series 2, Smithsonian Institution / MAB Biodiversity Programs, Washington, D.C., xliv + 298 pp.
  • Alonso, A., Dallmeier, F., Campbell, P. & Nogueron, R. (2001) The Lower Urubamba Region, Peru. In: Alonso, A., Dallmeier, F. & Campbell, P. (Eds), Urubamba: the Biodiversity of a Peruvian Rainforest. SI/MAB Series 7, Smithsonian Institution / MAB Biodiversity Programs, Washington, D.C., pp. 1-7.
  • Cabrera, A. (1919) Genera Mammalium. Monotremata, Marsupialia. Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales. Madrid, Spain. 177 pp.
  • Cabrera, A. (1958) Catalogo de los mamiferos de America del Sur, I. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales "Bernardino Rivadavia", Ciencias Zoologicas, 4, 1-307.
  • Comiskey, J.A., Campbell, J.P., Alonso, A., Mistry, S., Dallmeier, F., Nunez, P., Beltran, H., Baldeon, S., Nauray, W., Colina, R. de la, Acurio, L. & Udvardy, S. (2001) The vegetation communities of the Lower Urubamba Region, Peru. In: Alonso, A., Dallmeier, F. & Campbell, P. (Eds), Urubamba: the Biodiversity of a Peruvian Rainforest. SI/ MAB Series 7, Smithsonian Institution / MAB Biodiversity Programs, Washington, D.C., pp. 9-32.
  • Creighton, G.K. (1984) Systematic Studies on Opossums (Didelphidae) and Rodents (Cricetidae). Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, xi + 220 pp.
  • Cuartas-Calle, C. & Munoz, A.J. (2003) Marsupiales, Cenolestidos e Insectivoros de Colombia. Editorial Universidad de Antioquia, Medellin, xiv + 227 pp.
  • Emmons, L.H. & Feer, F. (1990) Neotropical Rainforest Mammals [:] A field guide. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, xiv + 281 pp.
  • Emmons, L.H. & Feer, F. (1997) Neotropical Rainforest Mammals [:] A Field Guide, Second edition. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, xvi + 307 pp.
  • Felsenstein, J. (1985) Confidence limits on phylogenies: an approach using the bootstrap. Evolution, 39, 783-791.
  • Gardner, A.L. (1993) Order Didelphimorphia. In: Wilson, D.E. & Reeder, D.M. (Eds), Mammal Species of the World, a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference, Second edition. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., pp. 15-24.
  • Gardner, A.L. (2005) Order Didelphimorphia. In: Wilson, D.E. & Reeder, D.M. (Eds), Mammal Species of the World, a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference, Third edition. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, pp. 3-18.
  • Gardner, A.L. & Creighton, G.K. (1989) A new generic name for Tate's (1933) microtarsus group of South American mouse opossums (Marsupialia: Didelphidae). Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 102, 3-7.
  • Gilmore, R.M. (1941) The susceptibility to yellow fever of the vertebrates of eastern Colombia. I. Marsupialia. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine, 21, 309-333.
  • Gruber, K.F., Voss, R.S. & Jansa, S.A. (2007) Base-compositional heterogeneity in the RAG1 locus among didelphid marsupials: Implications for phylogenetic inference and the evolution of GC content. Systematic Biology, 56, 83-96.
  • Handley, C.O., Jr. & Gordon, L.K. (1979) New species of mammals from northern South America: Mouse possums [sic], genus Marmosa Gray. In: Eisenberg, J.F. (Ed), Vertebrate Ecology in the Northern Neotropics. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., pp. 65-72.
  • Jansa, S.A. & Voss, R.S. (2005) Phylogenetic relationships of the marsupial genus Hyladelphys based on nuclear gene sequences and morphology. Journal of Mammalogy, 86, 853-865.
  • Kirsch, J.A.W. & Calaby, J.H. (1977) The species of living marsupials: An annotated list. In: Stonehouse, B. & Gilmore, D. (Eds), The Biology of Marsupials. University Park Press, Baltimore, pp. 9-26.
  • Lunde, D.P. & Schutt, W.A., Jr. (1999) The peculiar carpal tubercles of male Marmosops parvidens and Marmosa robinsoni (Didelphidae: Didelphinae). Mammalia, 63, 495-504.
  • Marshall, L.G. (1981) The families and genera of Marsupialia. Fieldiana, Geology, n.s., 8, i-vi, 1-65.
  • Nowak, R.M. (1999) Walker's Mammals of the World. Sixth Ed. Vol. I. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, lxx + 836 pp.
  • NWMSP (New World Marsupial Specialist Group) (1996) Marmosa andersoni. In: IUCN 2007, 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Available from http://www.iucnredlist.org/ (accessed 20 February 2008).
  • Pacheco, V., Patterson, B.D., Patton, J.L., Emmons, L.H., Solari, S. & Ascorra, C.F. (1993) List of mammal species known to occur on the Manu Biosphere Reserve, Peru. Publicaciones del Museo de Historia Natural UNMSM (A), 44, 1-12.
  • Patton, J.L., Silva, M.N.F. da & Malcolm, J.R. (2000) Mammals of the Rio Jurua and the evolutionary and ecological diversification of Amazonia. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 244, 1-306.
  • Pine, R.H. (1972) A new subgenus and species of murine opossum (genus Marmosa) from Peru. Journal of Mammalogy, 53, 279-282.
  • Pine, R.H. (1981) Reviews of the mouse opossums Marmosa parvidens Tate and Marmosa invicta Goldman (Mammalia: Marsupialia: Didelphidae) with description of a new species. Mammalia, 45, 55-70.
  • Pine, R.H. (1999) [Review of] Emmons, L. H. (text) and F. Feer (illustrations). 1997. Neotropical rainforest mammals [:] A Field Guide. 2nd ed. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, xvi + 307 pp. + pls 1-29, A-G and facing pages. ISBN 0-226-20719-6, price (cloth) $80.00, ISBN 0-226-20721-8, price (paper), $25.95. Journal of Mammalogy, 80, 304-311.
  • Pine, R.H. & Collins, L.R. (1973) Genus Marmosa (murine opossums). In: Collins, L.R. Monotremes and Marsupials [:] A Reference for Zoological Institutions, Publ. 4888, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., pp. 62-63.
  • Pine, R.H., Dalby, P.L. & Matson, J.O. (1985) Ecology, postnatal development, morphometrics, and taxonomic status of the short-tailed opossum, Monodelphis dimidiata, an apparently semelparous annual marsupial. Annals of Carnegie Museum, 54, 195-231.
  • Pine, R.H., Rice, J.E., Bucher, J.E., Tank, D.H., Jr. & Greenhall, A.M. (1985) Labile pigments and fluorescent pelage in didelphid marsupials. Mammalia, 49, 249-256.
  • Reig, O.A., Kirsch, J.A.W. & Marshall, L.G. (1985) New conclusions on the relationships of the opossum-like marsupials, whith [sic] an annotated classification of the Didelphimorphia. Ameghiniana, 21, 335-343.
  • Reig, O.A., Kirsch, J.A.W. & Marshall, L.G. (1987) Systematic relationships of the living and Neocenozoic American "opossum-like" marsupials (suborder Didelphimorphia), with comments on the classification of these and of the Cretaceous and Paleogene New World and European metatherians. In: Archer, M. (Ed), Possums and Opossums: Studies in Evolution. Vol. 1. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty. Ltd. and Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, Sydney, pp. 1-89.
  • Ridgway, R. (1912) Color Standards and Color Nomenclature. Published by the author, Washington, D.C., iv + 44 pp. + 53 pls.
  • Solari, S., Vivar, E., Rodriguez, J.J. & Mena, J.L. (1998) Small mammals: biodiversity assessment in the lower Urubamba region. In: Alonso, A. & Dallmeier, F. (Eds), Biodiversity Assessment and Monitoring of the Lower Urubamba Region, Peru: Cashiriari 3 Well Site and the Camisea and Urubamba Rivers. SI/MAB Series 2, Smithsonian Institution / MAB Biodiversity Programs, Washington, D.C., pp. 209-218.
  • Solari, S., Vivar, E., Rodriguez, J.J., Velazco, P.M., Wilson, D.E., Baker, R.J. & Mena, J.L. (2001) The small mammal community of the lower Urubamba Region, Peru. In: Dallmeier, F., Alonso, A., & Campbell, P. (Eds), Urubamba: The Biodiversity of a Peruvian Rainforest. SI/MAB Series 7, Smithsonian Institution / MAB Biodiversity Program, Washington, D.C., pp. 171-181.
  • Solari, S., Pacheco, V., Luna, L., Velazco, P.M. & Patterson, B.D. (2006) Mammals of the Manu Biosphere Reserve. In: Patterson, B.D., Stotz, D.F. & Solari, S. (Eds), Mammals and birds of the Manu Biosphere Reserve, Peru. Fieldiana, Zoology, n.s., 110, pp. 13-22.
  • Swofford, D.L. (2002) PAUP*: Phylogenetic analysis using parsimony (and other methods), version 4.08b. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Massachusetts.
  • Tate, G.H.H. (1933) A systematic revision of the marsupial genus Marmosa, with a discussion of the adaptive radiation of the murine opossums (Marmosa). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 66, 1-251 + 26 pls. + 9 folding tables.
  • Voss, R.S. & Jansa, S.A. (2003) Phylogenetic studies on didelphid marsupials II. Nonmolecular data and new IRBP sequences: separate and combined analyses of didelphine relationships with denser taxon sampling. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 276, 1-82.
  • Voss, R.S., Lunde, D.P. & Simmons, N.B. (2001) The mammals of Paracou, French Guiana: A Neotropical lowland rainforest fauna. Part 2. Nonvolant species. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 263, 1-236.
  • Voss, R.S., Gardner, A.L. & Jansa, S.A. (2004) On the relationships of "Marmosa" formosa Shamel, 1930 (Marsupialia: Didelphidae), a phylogenetic puzzle from the Chaco of northern Argentina. American Museum Novitates, 3442, 1- 18.
  • Voss, R.S., Lunde, D.P. & Jansa, S.A. (2005) On the contents of Gracilinanus Gardner and Creighton, 1989, with the description of a previously unrecognized clade of small didelphid marsupials. American Museum Novitates, 3482, 1-34.