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Wikipedia

Anteater

Anteaters are the four extant mammal species in the suborder Vermilingua[1] (meaning "worm tongue"), commonly known for eating ants and termites. The individual species have other names in English and other languages. Together with the sloths, they are within the order Pilosa. The name "anteater" is also commonly applied to the unrelated aardvark, numbat, echidnas, and pangolins, although they are not closely related to them.

Anteater
Temporal range: Early Miocene – present, 25–0 Ma
Giant anteater
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Pilosa
Suborder: Vermilingua
Illiger, 1811
Families

Cyclopedidae
Myrmecophagidae

Extant species are the giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla, about 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in) long including the tail; the silky anteater Cyclopes didactylus, about 35 cm (14 in) long; the southern tamandua or collared anteater Tamandua tetradactyla, about 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in) long; and the northern tamandua Tamandua mexicana of similar dimensions.

Etymology edit

The name anteater refers to the species' diet, which consists mainly of ants and termites. Anteater has also been used as a common name for a number of animals that are not in Vermilingua, including the echidnas, numbat, pangolins, and aardvark.[2][3] Anteaters are also known as antbears, although this is more commonly used as a name for the aardvark.[4] The word tamandua comes from Portuguese, which itself borrowed it from the Tupí tamanduá, meaning "ant hunter".[5] In Portuguese, tamanduá is used to refer to all anteaters; in Spanish, only the two species in the genus Tamandua are known by this name, with the giant anteater and silky anteater being called oso hormiguero and cíclope, respectively. All four species are also known by a number of indigenous names.[6]

Taxonomy edit

Evolutionary history edit

Anteaters are part of the Xenarthra superorder, a once diverse group of mammals that occupied South America while it was geographically isolated from the invasion of animals from North America, with the other two remaining animals in the family being the sloths and the armadillos.

At one time, anteaters were assumed to be related to aardvarks and pangolins because of their physical similarities to those animals, but these similarities have since been determined to be not a sign of a common ancestor, but of convergent evolution. All have evolved powerful digging forearms, long tongues, and toothless, tube-like snouts to subsist by raiding termite mounds.

Taxonomy edit

The anteaters are more closely related to the sloths than they are to any other group of mammals. Their next closest relations are armadillos. There are four extant species in three genera. There are several extinct genera as well.

Suborder Vermilingua (anteaters)

Morphology edit

 
The silky anteater is the smallest species in the order.

All anteaters have extremely elongated snouts equipped with a thin and long tongue that is coated with sticky saliva produced by enlarged submaxillary glands. The mouth is small and has no teeth. The frontal feet have large claws on the third digit, used to break into the mounds of termites and ants, and the remaining digits are usually slightly smaller or lacking entirely. The entire body is covered with dense fur. The tail is long, in some cases as long as the rest of the body, covered with varying amounts of fur, and prehensile in all species except for the giant anteater.[12][13] Anteaters are known to experience color abnormalities, including albinism in giant anteaters and albinism, leucism, and melanism in the southern tamandua.[14]

The giant anteater can be distinguished from the other species on the basis of its large size, with an average total body length of around 2 m (6.6 ft) and an average mass of 33 kg (73 lb). The body is mainly covered with long, dark brown or black fur, with a prominent triangular white-edged black band from the shoulders down to chest and continuing to the mid-body. The forelegs are mostly white, marked with black at the wrists and just above the claws. The tail is almost as long as the body and covered with long, coarse hairs.[12][13][15] Giant anteaters have the largest degree of rostral elongation relative to their size of any other ant-eating mammal.[16]

The tamanduas are medium-sized species smaller than the giant anteater, with a total body length of around 0.77–1.33 m (2.5–4.4 ft) and a mass of 3.2–7.0 kg (7.1–15.4 lb). They can further be distinguished by their shorter snout, their relatively shorter claws, proportionately longer ears, and mostly fur-less, prehensile tail. They also differ in their coloration; most individuals are golden brown to gray, with a black "vest" on the back and belly joined by two black bands running across the shoulders. Some tamanduas may lack the vest partially or entirely, instead having a uniformly yellow, brown, or black coat.[12][13]

The silky anteater is the smallest species in the order, with an average total body length of 43 cm (17 in) and an average mass of 235 g (8.3 oz).[13] It has extremely dense, silky, gray to golden-brown fur across its body, sometimes tinged silver on the back.[12][17] Some South American populations have a chocolate brown stripe down the middle of the back, most prominent in the Amazon basin.[17] The tail is extremely prehensile, and the limbs display adaptations to help it grab items while climbing.[13] Unlike the other anteaters and many other unrelated obligate ant-eating mammals,[18] the silky anteater's face is only slightly longer than expected for an animal of its size and shows a strong downward tilt.[16]

Distribution and habitat edit

Anteaters are endemic to the New World, where they are found on the mainland from southern Mexico to northern Argentina,[12] as well as some of the Caribbean islands.[17][19] Like other xenarthans, anteaters originally evolved in South America,[20] and began spreading to Central and North America as part of the Great American Interchange after the formation of the Isthmus of Panama around 3 million years ago.[21] Some species of anteaters may have had greater ranges during the early Pleistocene than they have currently; for example, fossils of the giant anteater have been found as far north as Sonora, Mexico, and the reduction in its range is probably due to changes in habitat due to deglaciation in North America in the later Pleistocene.[22]

Currently, the giant anteater is known from Central America south east of the Andes to northern Argentina, Bolivia, and Paraguay. West of the Andes, it is only known from Colombia and possibly Ecuador. It has been extirpated from much of its Central American range, and has also suffered local extinctions in the southern end of its distribution.[15] The northern tamandua is found from southern Mexico south to the western Andes of Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, and Ecuador,[23] while the southern tamandua inhabits South America east of the Andes, from as far north as Colombia, Trinidad, and the Guianas south to northern Uruguay and northern Argentina.[19] Both species of tamandua co-occur in some parts of their range.[23] The silky anteater occurs from Veracruz and Oaxaca in Mexico south to Colombia and Ecuador west of the Andes and to Brazil and Bolivia east of the Andes. An additional disjunct population also exists in northwestern Brazil.[17]

Anteater habitats include dry tropical forests, rainforests, grasslands, and savannas. The silky anteater is specialized to an arboreal environment, but the more opportunistic tamanduas find their food both on the ground and in trees, typically in dry forests near streams and lakes. The almost entirely terrestrial giant anteater lives in savannas.[24] The two anteaters of the genus Tamandua, the southern and the northern tamanduas are much smaller than the giant anteater, and differ essentially from it in their habits, being mainly arboreal. They inhabit the dense primeval forests of South and Central America.[25] The silky anteater (Cyclopes didactylus) is a native of the hottest parts of South and Central America and exclusively arboreal in its habits.[25]

Behavior and ecology edit

 
Sleeping giant anteater

Anteaters are mostly solitary mammals prepared to defend their 1.0 to 1.5 sq mi (2.6 to 3.9 km2) territories. They do not normally enter a territory of another anteater of the same sex, but males often enter the territory of associated females. When a territorial dispute occurs, they vocalize, swat, and can sometimes sit on or even ride the back of their opponents.[24]

Anteaters have poor sight but an excellent sense of smell, and most species depend on the latter for foraging, feeding, and defence. Their hearing is thought to be good.[24]

With a body temperature fluctuating between 33 and 36 °C (91 and 97 °F), anteaters, like other xenarthrans, have among the lowest body temperatures of any mammal,[26] and can tolerate greater fluctuations in body temperature than most mammals. Their daily energy intake from food is only slightly greater than their energy need for daily activities, and anteaters probably coordinate their body temperatures so they keep cool during periods of rest, and heat up during foraging.[24]

Reproduction edit

Adult males are slightly larger and more muscular than females, and have wider heads and necks. Visual sex determination can, however, be difficult, since the penis and testes are located internally between the rectum and urinary bladder in males and females have a single pair of mammae near the armpits. Fertilization occurs by contact transfer without intromission, similar to some lizards. Polygynous mating usually results in a single offspring; twins are possible but rare. The large foreclaws prevent mothers from grasping their newborns and they therefore have to carry the offspring until they are self-sufficient.[24]

Foraging and diet edit

Anteaters are specialized to feed on small insects, with each anteater species having its own insect preferences: small species are specialized on arboreal insects living on small branches, while large species can penetrate the hard covering of the nests of terrestrial insects. To avoid the jaws, sting, and other defences of the invertebrates, anteaters have adopted the feeding strategy of licking up large numbers of ants and termites as quickly as possible – an anteater normally spends about a minute at a nest before moving on to another – and a giant anteater has to visit up to 200 nests per day to consume the thousands of insects it needs to satisfy its caloric requirements.[24]

The anteater's tongue is covered with thousands of tiny hooks called filiform papillae which are used to hold the insects together with large amounts of saliva. Swallowing and the movement of the tongue are aided by side-to-side movements of the jaws. The tongue is attached to the sternum and moves very quickly, flicking 150 times per minute. The anteater's stomach, similar to a bird's gizzard, has hardened folds and uses strong contractions to grind the insects, a digestive process assisted by small amounts of ingested sand and dirt.[24]

Predators edit

A number of mammals and birds are known to prey on anteaters. Jaguars are known to feed upon both giant anteaters and the southern tamandua, with the latter species representing a significant portion of the jaguar's diet in some areas.[27][28] Tamanduas are additionally predated upon by ocelots, other felids, foxes,[12] and caimans,[29] and may be vulnerable to predation by harpy eagles near their nests.[30] Silky anteaters have been observed being attacked by hawks.[31]

Diseases and parasites edit

Anteaters are known to host a wide variety of parasites, including ticks, fleas, parasitic worms, and acanthocephalans.[32] The most common ticks found on anteaters are from the family Ixodidae, and especially the genus Amblyomma: 29 species of ixodids are known from anteaters, 25 of which belong to Amblyomma.[33] Anteaters are the primary host for at least four species of ticks: A. nodosum, A. calcaratum, A. goeldi, and A. pictum.[34] Parasitic worms collected from anteaters include those in the class Cestoda and nematodes in the families Spiruridae, Physalopteridae, Trichostrongylidae, and Ascarididae.[35][36] Parasitization by the nematode Physaloptera magnipapilla results in anemia and gastritis in the giant anteater.[37] The giant anteater is the type host of a species of nematode, Aspidodera serrata,[38] while the silky anteater is the type host of the coccidian Eimeria cyclopei.[39] Other parasites that affect anteaters are protozoans, bacteria, parabasalids, and viruses.[36][40]

Diseases that anteaters suffer from include physiological diseases like Sertoli cell tumors,[35][41] physical injuries such as burns and fractures, metabolic and nutritional disorders like soft tissue mineralization and hypervitaminosis D,[36][42] and infectious diseases like gastritis,[citation needed] osteomyelitis,[43] and dermatitis.[36] Anteaters may serve as vectors for the transmission of several diseases between species.[33][44] Ticks from anteaters are known to carry Rickettsia bacteria, which cause spotted fever in humans.[33][45] Anteaters have also been infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19,[44] Leishmania, the protozoan that causes leishmaniasis,[46] and canine distemper-causing Morbillivirus, contracting the last disease from a maned wolf in captivity.[47][48] Anteaters, like other xenarthans, display several adaptations that lead to very low rates of cancer among them, such as programmed cell death at very low levels of DNA damage.[49]

Conservation edit

The silky anteater and both of the tamanduas are classified as being of least concern by the IUCN due to their large ranges, presumed large populations, and the lack of significant enough population declines.[50][51][52] The giant anteater is classified as being vulnerable due to high levels of habitat loss and degradation, an ongoing population decline of greater than 30% in the last 21 years, and a number of threats such as hunting and wildfires.[53] Additionally, the population of the silky anteater from northeastern Brazil has been assessed separately by the IUCN and classified as being data deficient, although its population is currently thought to be decreasing due habitat loss and illegal capture for the wildlife trade.[54]

References edit

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Vermilingua at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Vermilingua at Wikispecies

anteater, other, uses, disambiguation, four, extant, mammal, species, suborder, vermilingua, meaning, worm, tongue, commonly, known, eating, ants, termites, individual, species, have, other, names, english, other, languages, together, with, sloths, they, withi. For other uses see Anteater disambiguation Anteaters are the four extant mammal species in the suborder Vermilingua 1 meaning worm tongue commonly known for eating ants and termites The individual species have other names in English and other languages Together with the sloths they are within the order Pilosa The name anteater is also commonly applied to the unrelated aardvark numbat echidnas and pangolins although they are not closely related to them AnteaterTemporal range Early Miocene present 25 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NGiant anteaterScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PilosaSuborder VermilinguaIlliger 1811FamiliesCyclopedidaeMyrmecophagidaeExtant species are the giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla about 1 8 m 5 ft 11 in long including the tail the silky anteater Cyclopes didactylus about 35 cm 14 in long the southern tamandua or collared anteater Tamandua tetradactyla about 1 2 m 3 ft 11 in long and the northern tamandua Tamandua mexicana of similar dimensions Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Evolutionary history 2 2 Taxonomy 3 Morphology 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Behavior and ecology 5 1 Reproduction 5 2 Foraging and diet 5 3 Predators 5 4 Diseases and parasites 6 Conservation 7 References 8 External linksEtymology editThe name anteater refers to the species diet which consists mainly of ants and termites Anteater has also been used as a common name for a number of animals that are not in Vermilingua including the echidnas numbat pangolins and aardvark 2 3 Anteaters are also known as antbears although this is more commonly used as a name for the aardvark 4 The word tamandua comes from Portuguese which itself borrowed it from the Tupi tamandua meaning ant hunter 5 In Portuguese tamandua is used to refer to all anteaters in Spanish only the two species in the genus Tamandua are known by this name with the giant anteater and silky anteater being called oso hormiguero and ciclope respectively All four species are also known by a number of indigenous names 6 Taxonomy editSee also List of pilosans Evolutionary history edit Anteaters are part of the Xenarthra superorder a once diverse group of mammals that occupied South America while it was geographically isolated from the invasion of animals from North America with the other two remaining animals in the family being the sloths and the armadillos At one time anteaters were assumed to be related to aardvarks and pangolins because of their physical similarities to those animals but these similarities have since been determined to be not a sign of a common ancestor but of convergent evolution All have evolved powerful digging forearms long tongues and toothless tube like snouts to subsist by raiding termite mounds Taxonomy edit The anteaters are more closely related to the sloths than they are to any other group of mammals Their next closest relations are armadillos There are four extant species in three genera There are several extinct genera as well Pilosa 7 8 Folivora Bradypodidae BradypusCholoepodidae CholoepusVermilingua Cyclopedidae CyclopesMyrmecophagidae MyrmecophagaTamanduaSuborder Vermilingua anteaters Family Cyclopedidae Genus Cyclopes Silky anteater C didactylus Genus Palaeomyrmidon Rovereto 1914 9 Family Myrmecophagidae Genus Myrmecophaga Giant anteater M tridactyla Genus Neotamandua Rovereto 1914 10 Genus Tamandua Northern tamandua T mexicana Southern tamandua T tetradactyla Genus Protamandua Ameghino 1904 11 Morphology edit nbsp The silky anteater is the smallest species in the order All anteaters have extremely elongated snouts equipped with a thin and long tongue that is coated with sticky saliva produced by enlarged submaxillary glands The mouth is small and has no teeth The frontal feet have large claws on the third digit used to break into the mounds of termites and ants and the remaining digits are usually slightly smaller or lacking entirely The entire body is covered with dense fur The tail is long in some cases as long as the rest of the body covered with varying amounts of fur and prehensile in all species except for the giant anteater 12 13 Anteaters are known to experience color abnormalities including albinism in giant anteaters and albinism leucism and melanism in the southern tamandua 14 The giant anteater can be distinguished from the other species on the basis of its large size with an average total body length of around 2 m 6 6 ft and an average mass of 33 kg 73 lb The body is mainly covered with long dark brown or black fur with a prominent triangular white edged black band from the shoulders down to chest and continuing to the mid body The forelegs are mostly white marked with black at the wrists and just above the claws The tail is almost as long as the body and covered with long coarse hairs 12 13 15 Giant anteaters have the largest degree of rostral elongation relative to their size of any other ant eating mammal 16 The tamanduas are medium sized species smaller than the giant anteater with a total body length of around 0 77 1 33 m 2 5 4 4 ft and a mass of 3 2 7 0 kg 7 1 15 4 lb They can further be distinguished by their shorter snout their relatively shorter claws proportionately longer ears and mostly fur less prehensile tail They also differ in their coloration most individuals are golden brown to gray with a black vest on the back and belly joined by two black bands running across the shoulders Some tamanduas may lack the vest partially or entirely instead having a uniformly yellow brown or black coat 12 13 The silky anteater is the smallest species in the order with an average total body length of 43 cm 17 in and an average mass of 235 g 8 3 oz 13 It has extremely dense silky gray to golden brown fur across its body sometimes tinged silver on the back 12 17 Some South American populations have a chocolate brown stripe down the middle of the back most prominent in the Amazon basin 17 The tail is extremely prehensile and the limbs display adaptations to help it grab items while climbing 13 Unlike the other anteaters and many other unrelated obligate ant eating mammals 18 the silky anteater s face is only slightly longer than expected for an animal of its size and shows a strong downward tilt 16 Distribution and habitat editAnteaters are endemic to the New World where they are found on the mainland from southern Mexico to northern Argentina 12 as well as some of the Caribbean islands 17 19 Like other xenarthans anteaters originally evolved in South America 20 and began spreading to Central and North America as part of the Great American Interchange after the formation of the Isthmus of Panama around 3 million years ago 21 Some species of anteaters may have had greater ranges during the early Pleistocene than they have currently for example fossils of the giant anteater have been found as far north as Sonora Mexico and the reduction in its range is probably due to changes in habitat due to deglaciation in North America in the later Pleistocene 22 Currently the giant anteater is known from Central America south east of the Andes to northern Argentina Bolivia and Paraguay West of the Andes it is only known from Colombia and possibly Ecuador It has been extirpated from much of its Central American range and has also suffered local extinctions in the southern end of its distribution 15 The northern tamandua is found from southern Mexico south to the western Andes of Colombia Venezuela Peru and Ecuador 23 while the southern tamandua inhabits South America east of the Andes from as far north as Colombia Trinidad and the Guianas south to northern Uruguay and northern Argentina 19 Both species of tamandua co occur in some parts of their range 23 The silky anteater occurs from Veracruz and Oaxaca in Mexico south to Colombia and Ecuador west of the Andes and to Brazil and Bolivia east of the Andes An additional disjunct population also exists in northwestern Brazil 17 Anteater habitats include dry tropical forests rainforests grasslands and savannas The silky anteater is specialized to an arboreal environment but the more opportunistic tamanduas find their food both on the ground and in trees typically in dry forests near streams and lakes The almost entirely terrestrial giant anteater lives in savannas 24 The two anteaters of the genus Tamandua the southern and the northern tamanduas are much smaller than the giant anteater and differ essentially from it in their habits being mainly arboreal They inhabit the dense primeval forests of South and Central America 25 The silky anteater Cyclopes didactylus is a native of the hottest parts of South and Central America and exclusively arboreal in its habits 25 Behavior and ecology edit nbsp Sleeping giant anteaterAnteaters are mostly solitary mammals prepared to defend their 1 0 to 1 5 sq mi 2 6 to 3 9 km2 territories They do not normally enter a territory of another anteater of the same sex but males often enter the territory of associated females When a territorial dispute occurs they vocalize swat and can sometimes sit on or even ride the back of their opponents 24 Anteaters have poor sight but an excellent sense of smell and most species depend on the latter for foraging feeding and defence Their hearing is thought to be good 24 With a body temperature fluctuating between 33 and 36 C 91 and 97 F anteaters like other xenarthrans have among the lowest body temperatures of any mammal 26 and can tolerate greater fluctuations in body temperature than most mammals Their daily energy intake from food is only slightly greater than their energy need for daily activities and anteaters probably coordinate their body temperatures so they keep cool during periods of rest and heat up during foraging 24 Reproduction edit Adult males are slightly larger and more muscular than females and have wider heads and necks Visual sex determination can however be difficult since the penis and testes are located internally between the rectum and urinary bladder in males and females have a single pair of mammae near the armpits Fertilization occurs by contact transfer without intromission similar to some lizards Polygynous mating usually results in a single offspring twins are possible but rare The large foreclaws prevent mothers from grasping their newborns and they therefore have to carry the offspring until they are self sufficient 24 Foraging and diet edit Anteaters are specialized to feed on small insects with each anteater species having its own insect preferences small species are specialized on arboreal insects living on small branches while large species can penetrate the hard covering of the nests of terrestrial insects To avoid the jaws sting and other defences of the invertebrates anteaters have adopted the feeding strategy of licking up large numbers of ants and termites as quickly as possible an anteater normally spends about a minute at a nest before moving on to another and a giant anteater has to visit up to 200 nests per day to consume the thousands of insects it needs to satisfy its caloric requirements 24 The anteater s tongue is covered with thousands of tiny hooks called filiform papillae which are used to hold the insects together with large amounts of saliva Swallowing and the movement of the tongue are aided by side to side movements of the jaws The tongue is attached to the sternum and moves very quickly flicking 150 times per minute The anteater s stomach similar to a bird s gizzard has hardened folds and uses strong contractions to grind the insects a digestive process assisted by small amounts of ingested sand and dirt 24 Predators edit A number of mammals and birds are known to prey on anteaters Jaguars are known to feed upon both giant anteaters and the southern tamandua with the latter species representing a significant portion of the jaguar s diet in some areas 27 28 Tamanduas are additionally predated upon by ocelots other felids foxes 12 and caimans 29 and may be vulnerable to predation by harpy eagles near their nests 30 Silky anteaters have been observed being attacked by hawks 31 Diseases and parasites edit Anteaters are known to host a wide variety of parasites including ticks fleas parasitic worms and acanthocephalans 32 The most common ticks found on anteaters are from the family Ixodidae and especially the genus Amblyomma 29 species of ixodids are known from anteaters 25 of which belong to Amblyomma 33 Anteaters are the primary host for at least four species of ticks A nodosum A calcaratum A goeldi and A pictum 34 Parasitic worms collected from anteaters include those in the class Cestoda and nematodes in the families Spiruridae Physalopteridae Trichostrongylidae and Ascarididae 35 36 Parasitization by the nematode Physaloptera magnipapilla results in anemia and gastritis in the giant anteater 37 The giant anteater is the type host of a species of nematode Aspidodera serrata 38 while the silky anteater is the type host of the coccidian Eimeria cyclopei 39 Other parasites that affect anteaters are protozoans bacteria parabasalids and viruses 36 40 Diseases that anteaters suffer from include physiological diseases like Sertoli cell tumors 35 41 physical injuries such as burns and fractures metabolic and nutritional disorders like soft tissue mineralization and hypervitaminosis D 36 42 and infectious diseases like gastritis citation needed osteomyelitis 43 and dermatitis 36 Anteaters may serve as vectors for the transmission of several diseases between species 33 44 Ticks from anteaters are known to carry Rickettsia bacteria which cause spotted fever in humans 33 45 Anteaters have also been infected with SARS CoV 2 the virus that causes COVID 19 44 Leishmania the protozoan that causes leishmaniasis 46 and canine distemper causing Morbillivirus contracting the last disease from a maned wolf in captivity 47 48 Anteaters like other xenarthans display several adaptations that lead to very low rates of cancer among them such as programmed cell death at very low levels of DNA damage 49 Conservation editThe silky anteater and both of the tamanduas are classified as being of least concern by the IUCN due to their large ranges presumed large populations and the lack of significant enough population declines 50 51 52 The giant anteater is classified as being vulnerable due to high levels of habitat loss and degradation an ongoing population decline of greater than 30 in the last 21 years and a number of threats such as hunting and wildfires 53 Additionally the population of the silky anteater from northeastern Brazil has been assessed separately by the IUCN and classified as being data deficient although its population is currently thought to be decreasing due habitat loss and illegal capture for the wildlife trade 54 References edit Giant Anteater Facts Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on 2011 08 28 Retrieved 2011 07 30 Anteater Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 OED 1002244695 Retrieved 19 August 2023 Subscription or participating institution membership required Definition of ANTEATER www merriam webster com 2023 07 11 Retrieved 2023 08 19 Ant bear Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 OED 4378206907 Retrieved 20 August 2023 Subscription or participating institution membership required Tamandua Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 OED 1093689655 Retrieved 19 August 2023 Subscription or participating institution membership required Superina Mariella Aguiar John M 2006 A Reference List of Common Names for the Edentates Edentata 7 1 33 doi 10 1896 1413 4411 7 1 33 S2CID 84399406 Presslee Samantha Slater Graham J Pujos Francois Forasiepi Analia M Fischer Roman Molloy Kelly Mackie Meaghan Olsen Jesper V Kramarz Alejandro Taglioretti Matias Scaglia Fernando Lezcano Maximiliano Lanata Jose Luis Southon John Feranec Robert Bloch Jonathan Hajduk 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Chicago University of Chicago press pp 168 177 ISBN 978 0 226 28240 4 Bolla Daniela Baraldo Mello Joao P Garcia Thierry Rovito Sean 2022 Color abnormalities in the Giant Anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla Linnaeus 1758 and Southern Tamandua Tamandua tetradactyla Linnaeus 1758 from Brazil and Ecuador Notas sobre Mamiferos Sudamericanos in Spanish 04 1 001 008 doi 10 31687 SaremNMS22 11 2 ISSN 2618 4788 a b Gaudin Timothy J Hicks Patrick Di Blanco Yamil 12 April 2018 Myrmecophaga tridactyla Pilosa Myrmecophagidae Mammalian Species 50 956 1 13 doi 10 1093 mspecies sey001 hdl 11336 90534 a b Naples Virginia L September 1999 Morphology evolution and function of feeding in the giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla Journal of Zoology 249 1 19 41 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1999 tb01057 x ISSN 0952 8369 a b c d Hayssen Virginia Miranda Flavia Pasch Bret 25 January 2012 Cyclopes didactylus Pilosa Cyclopedidae Mammalian Species 44 51 58 doi 10 1644 895 1 S2CID 86110792 REISS KAREN ZICH 2000 Feeding 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31010025 a b c d e f g Grzimek Bernhard 2004 Hutchins Michael Kleiman Devra G Geist Valerius McDade Melissa S eds Grzimek s Animal Life Encyclopedia Vol 13 2nd ed Detroit Gale pp 171 175 ISBN 978 0 7876 7750 3 a b nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Anteater Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 89 Lovegrove B G August 2000 The Zoogeography of Mammalian Basal Metabolic Rate The American Naturalist The University of Chicago Press 156 2 201 219 see 214 215 doi 10 1086 303383 JSTOR 3079219 PMID 10856202 S2CID 4436119 Foster Vania C Sarmento Pedro Sollmann Rahel Torres Natalia Jacomo Anah T A Negroes Nuno Fonseca Carlos Silveira Leandro 2013 Jaguar and Puma Activity Patterns and Predator Prey Interactions in Four Brazilian Biomes Biotropica 45 3 378 Bibcode 2013Biotr 45 373F doi 10 1111 btp 12021 S2CID 86338173 Cavalcanti Sandra M C Gese Eric M 2010 06 16 Kill rates and 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9 1 20 26 hdl 123456789 28376 Cesario Clarice S Gomes Ana Paula N Maldonado Arnaldo Olifiers Natalie Jimenez Francisco A Bianchi Rita C 10 February 2021 A New Species of Aspidodera Nematoda Heterakoidea Parasitizing the Giant Anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla Pilosa Myrmecophagidae in Brazil and New Key to Species Comparative Parasitology 88 1 doi 10 1654 1525 2647 88 1 7 S2CID 233914359 Lainson Ralph Shaw Jeffrey J 1982 Coccidia of Brazilian edentates Eimeria cyclopei n sp from the silky anteater Cyclopes didactylus Linn and Eimeria choloepi n sp from the two toed sloth Choloepus didactylus Linn Systematic Parasitology 4 3 269 278 doi 10 1007 BF00009629 ISSN 0165 5752 S2CID 25858346 Ibanez Escribano A Nogal Ruiz J J Delclaux M Martinez Nevado E Ponce Gordo F August 2013 Morphological and molecular identification of Tetratrichomonas flagellates from the giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla Research in Veterinary Science 95 1 176 181 doi 10 1016 j rvsc 2013 01 022 PMID 23465778 Santana Clarissa H Souza Lucas dos R de Silva Laice A da Oliveira Ayisa R Paula Nayara F de Santos Daniel O dos Pereira Fernanda M A M Vieira Andre D Ribeiro Leticia N Soares Neto Lauro L Bicudo Alexandre L da Costa Hippolito Alicia G Paixao Tatiane A da Santos Renato L July 2023 Metastatic Sertoli cell tumour in a captive giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla Journal of Comparative Pathology 204 17 22 doi 10 1016 j jcpa 2023 05 001 PMID 37321133 S2CID 259176224 Cole Georgina C Naylor Adam D Hurst Emma Girling Simon J Mellanby Richard J 17 March 2020 Hypervitaminosis D in a Giant Anteater Myrmecophaga Tridactyla and a Large Hairy Armadillo Chaetophractus Villosus Receiving a Commercial Insectivore Diet Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 51 1 245 248 doi 10 1638 2019 0042 PMID 32212572 S2CID 213184615 Cotts Leonardo Amaral Roberta V Laeta Maira Cunha Filho Carlos A Moratelli Ricardo December 2019 Pathology in the appendicular bones of southern tamandua Tamandua tetradactyla Xenarthra Pilosa injuries to the locomotor system and first case report of osteomyelitis in anteaters BMC Veterinary Research 15 1 120 doi 10 1186 s12917 019 1869 x PMC 6485120 PMID 31023313 a b Pereira Asheley Henrique Barbosa Pereira Gabriela Oliveira Borges Jaqueline Camargo de Barros Silva Victoria Luiza Pereira Barbara Hawanna Marques Morgado Thays Oliveira da Silva Cavasani Joao Paulo Slhessarenko Renata Dezengrini Campos Richard Pacheco Biondo Alexander Welker de Carvalho Mendes Renan Nespoli Pedro Eduardo Brandini de Souza Marcos Almeida Colodel Edson Moleta Ubiali Daniel Guimaraes Dutra Valeria Nakazato Luciano December 2022 A Novel Host of an Emerging Disease SARS CoV 2 Infection in a Giant Anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla Kept Under Clinical Care in Brazil EcoHealth 19 4 458 462 doi 10 1007 s10393 022 01623 6 PMC 9872066 PMID 36692797 Szabo Matias Pablo Juan Pascoal Jamile Oliveira Martins Maria Marlene Ramos Vanessa do Nascimento Osava Carolina Fonseca Santos Andre Luis Quagliatto Yokosawa Jonny Rezende Lais Miguel Tolesano Pascoli Graziela Virginia Torga Khelma de Castro Marcio Botelho Suzin Adriane Barbieri Amalia Regina Mar Werther Karin Silva Juliana Macedo Magnino Labruna Marcelo Bahia April 2019 Ticks and Rickettsia on anteaters from Southeast and Central West Brazil Ticks and Tick borne Diseases 10 3 540 545 doi 10 1016 j ttbdis 2019 01 008 PMID 30709660 S2CID 73441483 Munoz Garcia Claudia I Sanchez Montes Sokani Villanueva Garcia Claudia Romero Callejas Evangelina Diaz Lopez Hilda M Gordillo Chavez Elias J Martinez Carrasco Carlos Berriatua Eduardo Rendon Franco Emilio April 2019 The role of sloths and anteaters as Leishmania spp reservoirs a review and a newly described natural infection of Leishmania mexicana in the northern anteater Parasitology Research 118 4 1095 1101 doi 10 1007 s00436 019 06253 6 PMID 30770980 S2CID 253977205 Debesa Belizario Granjeiro Melissa Lima Kavasaki Mayara Morgado Thais O Avelino Dandolini Pavelegini Lucas Alves de Barros Marisol Fontana Carolina Assis Bianchini Mateus Oliveira Souza Aneliza Goncalves Lima Oliveira Santos Amanda R Lunardi Michele Colodel Edson M Aguiar Daniel M Jorge Mendonca Adriane August 2020 First report of a canine morbillivirus infection in a giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla in Brazil Veterinary Medicine and Science 6 3 606 611 doi 10 1002 vms3 246 PMC 7397876 PMID 32023667 Souza Lucas R Carvalho Marcelo P N Lopes Carlos E B Lopes Marcelo C Campos Bruna H Teixeira Erika P T Mendes Ellen J Santos Leidilene P Caixeta Eduardo A Costa Erica A Cunha Joao L R Fraiha Ana L S Silva Rodrigo O S Ramos Carolina P Varaschin Mary S Ecco Roselene September 2022 Outbreak of canine distemper and coinfections in a maned wolf Chrysocyon brachyurus and in three giant anteaters Myrmecophaga tridactyla Brazilian Journal of Microbiology 53 3 1731 1741 doi 10 1007 s42770 022 00783 5 PMC 9433619 PMID 35864379 Vazquez Juan Manuel Pena Maria T Muhammad Baaqeyah Kraft Morgan Adams Linda B Lynch Vincent J 8 December 2022 Parallel evolution of reduced cancer risk and tumor suppressor duplications in Xenarthra eLife 11 doi 10 7554 eLife 82558 PMC 9810328 PMID 36480266 Miranda F Meritt D A Tirira D G Arteaga M 2014 Cyclopes didactylus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014 e T6019A47440020 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2014 1 RLTS T6019A47440020 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Ortega Reyes J Tirira D G Arteaga M Miranda F 2014 Tamandua mexicana IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014 e T21349A47442649 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2014 1 RLTS T21349A47442649 en Retrieved 17 November 2021 Miranda F Fallabrino A Arteaga M Tirira D G Meritt D A Superina M 2014 Tamandua tetradactyla IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014 e T21350A47442916 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2014 1 RLTS T21350A47442916 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Miranda F Bertassoni A Abba A M 2014 Myrmecophaga tridactyla IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014 e T14224A47441961 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2014 1 RLTS T14224A47441961 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Miranda F Superina M 2014 Cyclopes didactylus Northeastern Brazil subpopulation IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014 e T173393A47444393 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2014 1 RLTS T173393A47444393 en Retrieved 20 August 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Vermilingua at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Vermilingua at Wikispecies Portals nbsp Mammals nbsp Animals Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anteater amp oldid 1188785030, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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