Toromys grandis ( Wagner, 1845 )

Emmons, Louise H. & Fabre, Pierre-henri, 2018, A Review of the Pattonomys / Toromys Clade (Rodentia: Echimyidae), with Descriptions of a New Toromys Species and a New Genus, American Museum Novitates 2018 (3894), pp. 1-52 : 35-37

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1206/3894.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039C2E2F-FFF2-D559-FE6E-FA0EFE74FE17

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Toromys grandis ( Wagner, 1845 )
status

 

Toromys grandis ( Wagner, 1845)

Loncheres grandis Wagner, 1845: 146 (original description).

TYPE SPECIMEN AND TYPE LOCALITY: NMW 920 View Materials ; a skin with missing distal tail and skull without rostrum, sex unknown but probably male; collected by J. Natterer ( JN 167 ) in “Amazonstrom,”

5 DNA sequenced to confirm identity. this locality given by Pelzeln (1883: 63) as “Manaqueri im Mündungsbereich des Rio Solimões,” now Manaquiri ( Paynter and Traylor, 1991). Pelzeln also noted, from Natterer’s catalogue, that the specimen was received from Estanislao stuffed and unfortunately missing the tail tip.

DIAGNOSIS AND DESCRIPTION: The largest of the Echimyini (head and body length 275– 254 mm; greatest length of skull 67–70 mm; tables 5, 6). Dorsal pelage a striking mixture of pitch black and ochraceous yellow-banded aristiform bristles that impart a golden or warm ochraceous-yellow appearance at the midbody ( fig. 14A View FIG ). Head, crown, and neck black speckled with a few yellow-banded hairs. Underparts gray, with dark gray-based hairs tipped with translucent cream; the inguinal region tends to be cream colored. The dorsal color grades gradually into the ventral color field. Tail robust, generally about the same as head-and-body length, thickly haired at the base above and below with an extension of dorsal pelage onto tail; tail pelage changes abruptly to long, dense, straight, pitch-black hairs that nearly cover scales and are longest near tail base to form a puff on the basal third ( fig. 14A View FIG ). Rare specimens have the extreme tail tip whitish, but not tufted. Hind feet broad at the base of the toes and narrow at the heel ( fig. 14A View FIG ); blackish above, finely speckled with yellow, with black toes; ungual tufts sparse and shorter than the robust claws; palmar surfaces are pinkish, but otherwise as described for T. rhipidurus ( fig. 6A View FIG ). Cranium narrow and elongate in dorsal view, with a narrow rostrum, nasals distally flared laterally and slightly pinched-in medially; medial parietal-interparietal suture recurved anteriorly between the separated temporal ridges (insertions of the posterior temporalis, 33/35 crania), which are raised in older individuals ( fig. 9A View FIG , black arrow), or more rarely, the suture is nearly straight (2/35); squamosal expanded laterally into a broad shelf over the meatus (the insertion of the pars posterior of the temporalis muscle), such that the skull is much wider over the ear than at its narrower point posterior to the tip of the jugal ( fig. 9A View FIG , white arrow). In dorsal view, the zygomatic arches generally narrow anteriorly. In lateral view, jugal robust and deep dorsoventrally; and squamosal forms a strong beaded ridge over the auditory meatus ( fig. 7A View FIG ). Upper incisors orange faced and extremely robust, with roots within the anterior maxillary base of the zygoma (posterior to a vertical line drawn from the anterior edge of the ascending arch). Many characters were reported in Iack-Ximenes et al. (2005), but others are first noted here.

NATURAL HISTORY: Toromys grandis appears to be restricted to seasonally or permanently flooded forests of várzea (white water) and igapó (black water) rivers. The BBC film “Amazon, Land of the Flooded Forest” shows two T. grandis using a treehole and traveling with monkeylike agility along branches in flooded forest (but it might have been filmed ex situ). Abreu- Júnior et al. (2017) twice saw T. grandis jump into the water and swim beneath the surface to escape when approached. Toromys grandis descends to terrestrial riverbanks, perhaps for mineral nutrients ( fig. 14A View FIG ), as does Echimys saturnus (see Blake et al., 2010). A recent image shows T. grandis feeding on green, unripe fruit of Gustavia sp. (Lecythidaceae) along the Rio Maués- Mirim about 70 km S of Urucurituba (fig. 1: loc. 16; J. Hall, personal commun.), and F. Reid (personal commun.) saw T. grandis feed on both leaves of a leguminous tree, and fruits. The large body size, robust cranium, and tendency in Toromys toward near-laminarity of the upper cheekteeth may be associated with a herbivorous or fibrous diet, as might the lateral expansion of the squamosal attachment of the temporalis muscle of T. grandis ( fig. 9A View FIG ), which is similarly expanded in the herbivorous “dactylomyines.”

SPECIMENS EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Amazonas, Lago Manaquiri ( NMW 920 View Materials [holotype]) ; Villa Bella Imperatriz (= Parantins), Santa Clara, Amazon River , south bank, ( AMNH 92907 View Materials , 92909– 92950 View Materials , 93151–93153 View Materials , 93594–93624 View Materials , 93785 View Materials , 93786 View Materials ) ; Serra do Parintins, Amazon River , south bank (not located); ( AMNH 93625–93633 View Materials , 94020–94036 View Materials ) ; Boca do Igarapé Piaba ( MCZ 32352, 32353 View Materials ) ; Paraná de Faro, ( BMNH 11.12.22.12) ; Santarém, ( BMNH 5.6.3.1) ; Rio Amazonas, Ilha Urucurituba ( FMNH 92198 View Materials *, 92199) ; Pará, Faro, Fazenda Paraiso , ( AMNH 37476 View Materials ) ; Faro , ( AMNH 94037–94043 View Materials ) ; Villarinho do Monte, Rio Xingu , ( AMNH 95957 View Materials ) ; Faro, Amazon River, north bank, Nhamundá River , Lago Uaimy , ( AMNH 94193 View Materials , 94194 View Materials ) ; Rio Nhamundá, Fazenda Paraiso , ( FMNH 19497 View Materials ) .

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Rodentia

Family

Echimyidae

Genus

Toromys

Loc

Toromys grandis ( Wagner, 1845 )

Emmons, Louise H. & Fabre, Pierre-henri 2018
2018
Loc

Loncheres grandis

Wagner, J. A. 1845: 146
1845
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