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Giant anteater

The giant anteater (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) is an insectivorous mammal native to Central and South America. It is one of four living species of anteaters, of which it is the largest member. The only extant member of the genus Myrmecophaga, it is classified with sloths in the order Pilosa. This species is mostly terrestrial, in contrast to other living anteaters and sloths, which are arboreal or semiarboreal. The giant anteater is 182 to 217 cm (5 ft 11+12 in to 7 ft 1+12 in) in length, with weights of 33 to 50 kg (73 to 110 lb) for males and 27 to 47 kg (60 to 104 lb) for females. It is recognizable by its elongated snout, bushy tail, long fore claws, and distinctively colored pelage.

Giant anteater[1]
Temporal range: Montehermosan–Recent
~5–0 Ma
A specimen at Copenhagen Zoo, Denmark, 2005
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Pilosa
Family: Myrmecophagidae
Genus: Myrmecophaga
Linnaeus, 1758[4]
Species:
M. tridactyla
Binomial name
Myrmecophaga tridactyla
Range
  extant
  possibly extinct
Synonyms
  • Myrmecophaga jubata Linnaeus,  1766
  • Falcifer Rehn, 1900[5]

The giant anteater is found in multiple habitats, including grassland and rainforest. It forages in open areas and rests in more forested habitats. It feeds primarily on ants and termites, using its fore claws to dig them up and its long, sticky tongue to collect them. Though giant anteaters live in overlapping home ranges, they are mostly solitary except during mother-offspring relationships, aggressive interactions between males, and when mating. Mother anteaters carry their offspring on their backs until weaning them.

The giant anteater is listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. It has been extirpated from many parts of its former range. Threats to its survival include habitat destruction, fire, and poaching for fur and bushmeat, although some anteaters inhabit protected areas. With its distinctive appearance and habits, the anteater has been featured in pre-Columbian myths and folktales, as well as modern popular culture.

Taxonomy edit

The giant anteater got its binomial name from Carl Linnaeus in 1758. Its generic name, Myrmecophaga, and specific name, tridactyla, are both Greek, meaning "anteater" and "three fingers", respectively.[6] Myrmecophaga jubata was used as a synonym. Three subspecies have been suggested: M. t. tridactyla (Venezuela and the Guianas south to northern Argentina), M. t. centralis (Central America to northwestern Colombia and northern Ecuador), and M. t. artata (northeastern Colombia and northwestern Venezuela). The giant anteater is grouped with the semiarboreal northern and southern tamanduas in the family Myrmecophagidae. Together with the family Cyclopedidae, whose only extant member is the arboreal silky anteater, the two families comprise the suborder Vermilingua.[7]

Anteaters and sloths belong to order Pilosa and share superorder Xenarthra (cladogram below[8]) with the Cingulata (whose only extant members are armadillos). The two orders of Xenarthra split 66 million years ago (Mya) during the Late Cretaceous epoch. Anteaters and sloths diverged around 55 Mya, between the Paleocene and Eocene epochs. The lineages of Cyclopes and other extant anteaters split around 40 Mya in the Oligocene epoch, while the last common ancestor of Myrmecophaga and Tamandua existed 10 Mya in the Late Miocene subepoch.[8] Though most of their evolutionary history, anteaters were confined to South America, which was formerly an island continent. Following the formation of the Isthmus of Panama about 3 Mya, anteaters of all three extant genera invaded Central America as part of the Great American Interchange.[9]

The fossil record for anteaters is generally sparse.[10] Known fossils include the Pliocene genus Palaeomyrmidon, a close relative to the silky anteater, Protamandua, which is closer to the giant anteater and the tamanduas from the Miocene, and Neotamandua, which is believed have close affinities to Myrmecophaga.[11] Protamandua was larger than the silky anteater, but smaller than a tamandua, while Neotamandua was larger, falling somewhere between a tamandua and a giant anteater. Protamandua did not appear to be specialized for walking or climbing, but it may have had a prehensile tail. Neotamandua, though, is unlikely to have had a prehensile tail and its feet were similar in form to both the tamanduas and the giant anteater.[10] The species Neotamandua borealis was suggested to be an ancestor of the latter.[12] Another member of the genus Myrmecophaga has been recovered from the Montehermosan Monte Hermoso Formation in Argentina and was described by Kraglievitch in 1934 as Nunezia caroloameghinoi.[13] The species was reclassified as Myrmecophaga caroloameghinoi by S. E. Hirschfeld in 1976.[12]

The giant anteater is the most terrestrial of the living anteater species; specialization for life on the ground appears to be a new trait in anteater evolution. The transition to life on the ground could have been aided by the expansion of open habitats such as savanna in South America and the abundance of native colonial insects, such as termites, that provided a larger potential food source. Both the giant anteater and the southern tamandua are well represented in the fossil record of the late Pleistocene and early Holocene.[10]

Characteristics edit

 
Side view
 
Mounted skeleton
 
Skull of a giant anteater

The giant anteater can be identified by its large size, long, narrow muzzle, and long bushy tail.[14] It has a total body length of 182 to 217 cm (5 ft 11+12 in to 7 ft 1+12 in). Males weigh 33 to 50 kg (73 to 110 lb) and females weigh 27 to 47 kg (60 to 104 lb),[6][15][16] making the giant anteater the biggest extant species in its suborder. The head of the giant anteater, at 30 cm (12 in) long,[17] is particularly elongated, even when compared to other anteaters.[18] Its cylindrical snout takes up most of its head. Its eyes, ears and mouth are relatively small.[6] It has poor eyesight,[14] but has a powerful sense of smell; 40 times that of a human.[19] While there is some difference in size and shape between the sexes, males being larger and more robust, telling them apart from a distance can be difficult. The male's genitals are located within its body and upon closer examination, its urogenital opening is smaller and farther from the anus.[20][21] The female's two mammary glands are located between the front legs.[20]

Even for an anteater, the neck is especially thick compared to the back of the head,[18] and a small hump protrudes behind the neck. The coat is mostly greyish, brown or black with mottled white. They have white front legs with black ringed wrists and hands, and dark hind legs. From the throat to the shoulders is a thick black mark with white outlines and sharp tips. The body ends in a brown tail. The coat hairs are long, especially on the tail, which makes the appendage look larger than it actually is. An erect mane stretches along the back.[6][22] The bold pattern was thought to be disruptive camouflage, but a 2009 study suggests it is warning coloration.[23]

The giant anteater has broad ribs. It has five toes on each foot.[6] Three toes on the front feet have claws, which are particularly large on the third digits.[22] It walks on its front knuckles similar to gorillas and chimpanzees. This allows the giant anteater to walk without scraping its claws on the ground. The middle digits, which support most of its weight, have long metacarpophalangeal joints and bent interphalangeal joints.[24] Unlike the front feet, the hind feet have short claws on all five toes and walk plantigrade.[6] As a "hook-and-pull" digger, the giant anteater has a large supraspinous fossa which gives the teres major more leverage—increasing the front limbs' pulling power—and the triceps muscle helps control the thickened middle digit.[25]

The giant anteater has a low body temperature for a mammal, about 33 °C (91 °F), a few degrees lower than a typical mammalian temperature of 36 to 38 °C (97 to 100 °F).[19] Xenarthrans in general tend to have lower metabolic rates than most other mammals, a trend thought to correlate with their dietary specializations and low mobility.[26]

Feeding anatomy edit

 
Anteater with tongue extended

The giant anteater has no teeth and is capable of very limited jaw movement. It relies on the rotation of the two halves of its lower jaw, held together by a ligament connecting the rami, to open and close its mouth. This is accomplished by its chewing muscles, which are relatively underdeveloped. Jaw depression creates an oral opening large enough for the slender tongue to flick out.[18][27] It has a length of around 60 cm (24 in)[6] and is more triangular in the back but becomes more rounded towards the front and ends in a rounded tip.[18][28] The tongue has backward-curving papillae and is extremely moist due to the large salivary glands.[17]

The tongue can only move forwards and backwards due to the tiny mouth and shape of the snout. During feeding, the animal relies on the direction of its head for aim. When fully extended, the tongue reaches 45 cm (18 in), and can move in and out around 160 times per minute (nearly three times per second).[18] A unique sternoglossus muscle, a combination of the sternohyoid and the hyoglossus, anchors the tongue directly to the sternum.[18][29][28][30] The hyoid apparatus is large, V-shaped and flexible, and supports the tongue as it moves.[18][28][31] The buccinator muscles loosen and tighten, allowing food in and preventing it from falling out. When retracted, the tongue is held in the oropharynx, preventing it from blocking respiration.[18]

The anteater rubs its tongue against its palate to smash the insects for swallowing.[17] Unlike other mammals, giant anteaters swallow almost constantly when feeding.[18] The giant anteater's stomach, similar to a bird's gizzard, has hardened folds to crush food, assisted by some sand and soil.[20] The giant anteater cannot produce stomach acid of its own, but digests using the formic acid of its prey.[17]

Distribution and status edit

 
In the grasslands of Serra da Canastra National Park, Brazil

The giant anteater is native to Central and South America; its known range stretches from Honduras to Bolivia and northern Argentina,[22] and fossil remains have been found as far north as northwestern Sonora, Mexico.[9] It is largely absent from the Andes[6] and has been fully extirpated in Uruguay, Belize, El Salvador, and Guatemala, as well as in parts of Costa Rica, Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay.[2] The species can live in both tropical rainforests and arid shrublands,[14] provided enough prey is present to sustain it.[32]

The species is listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, due to the number of regional extirpations,[2] and under Appendix II by CITES, tightly restricting international trade in specimens.[3] By 2014, the total population declined more than 30 percent "over the last three generations".[2] In 1994, some 340 giant anteaters died due to wildfires at Emas National Park in Brazil.[33] The animal is particularly vulnerable to fires as its coat can easily catch ablaze and it is too slow to escape.[6]

Human-induced threats include collision with vehicles, attacks by dogs and destruction of habitat.[32] One study of anteater mortality along roads found that they are likely to be struck on linear roads near native plants.[34] A 2018 study in Brazil found that: (1) roads were more likely to be detrimental to anteaters because of habitat fragmentation rather than vehicle accidents, (2) 18–20% of satisfactory anteater habitat did not reach minimum patch size (3) 0.1–1% of its range had dangerously high road density, (4) 32–36% of the anteater's distribution represented critical areas for its survival and (5) more conservation opportunities existed in the north of the country.[35] A 2020 study in the Brazilian cerrado found that road mortality can cut population growth by 50 percent at the local level.[36]

The giant anteater is commonly hunted in Bolivia, both as a trophy and food. The animal's thick, leathery hide is used to make horse-riding equipment in the Chaco. In Venezuela, it is slain for its claws. Giant anteaters are also killed for their perceived danger, particularly during threat displays. The biggest ecological strengths of the species is its wide range and adaptability. The Amazon, Pantanal and the cerrado have various protected areas where the anteater finds refuge.[32] In Argentina, some local governments list it as national heritage species, affording it official protection.[2]

Behaviour and ecology edit

 
Sleeping under its tail

Despite its iconic status, the giant anteater is little studied in the wild and research has been limited to certain areas.[37] The species may use multiple habitats. A 2007 study of giant anteaters in the Brazilian Pantanal found that the animals move and forage in open areas and rest in forest; the latter provide shade when the temperature rises and retain heat when the temperature drops.[38] Anteaters may travel an average of 3,700 m (12,100 ft) per day.[39] Giant anteaters can be either diurnal or nocturnal. A 2006 study in the Pantanal found them to be mostly nocturnal when it is warm, but became more active in daylight hours as the temperature dropped.[40] Diurnal giant anteaters have been observed at Serra da Canastra.[41] Nocturnality in anteaters may be a response to human disturbances.[42]

Giant anteaters prefer dense brush to sleep in, but when it gets cooler, they may use tall grass. When they need to rest, they carve a shallow cavity in the ground. The animal sleeps curled up with its bushy tail over its body; both to keep it warm and camouflage it from predators. One anteater was recorded sleeping flat on its side with the tail unfolded on a 17 °C (63 °F) morning; possibly to allow its body to absorb the sun's rays for warmth.[43] Giant anteaters sometimes enter water to bathe[44] and even swim across wide rivers.[6] They are also able to climb and have been recorded ascending both termite mounds and trees while foraging. One individual was observed attempting to climb a tree by rearing up and grabbing onto a branch above it.[45]

Spacing edit

 
Two captive anteaters. The species is generally solitary in the wild.

Giant anteater home ranges vary in size depending on the location, ranging as small as 2.7 km2 (667 acres) in Serra da Canastra National Park, Brazil, to as large as 32.5 km2 (8,031 acres) in Iberá Natural Reserve, Argentina.[39] Individuals mostly live alone, aside from young who stay with their mothers.[41] Anteaters keep in contact with secretions from their anal glands and tree markings.[38][46] They appear to be able to recognize each other's saliva by scent.[19]

Females are more tolerant of each other than males are, and thus are more likely to be found closer together. Males are more likely to engage in agonistic behaviors,[41] which start with the combatants approaching and circling each other while uttering a "harrr" noise. This can escalate into chasing and actual fighting. Combat includes wrestling and slashing with the claws.[6][19] Fighting anteaters may emit roars or bellows.[41] Males are possibly territorial.[19]

Foraging edit

 
Foraging

This animal is an insectivore, feeding mostly on ants or termites. In areas that experience regular flooding, like the Pantanal and the Venezuelan-Colombian Llanos, anteaters mainly feed on ants because termites are less available.[19] Conversely, anteaters at Emas National Park eat mainly termites, which are numerous in the grassland habitat. At Serra da Canastra, during the wet season (October to March) anteaters eat mainly ants, while during the dry season (May to September) they switch to termites.[19]

Anteaters track prey by their scent.[14] After finding a nest, the animal tears it open with its claws and inserts its long, sticky tongue to collect its prey (which includes eggs, larvae and adult insects).[22][17] An anteater attacks up to 200 nests in one day, for as long as a minute each, and consumes a total of around 35,000 insects.[20][17] The anteater may be driven away from a nest by the chemical or biting attacks of soldiers.[14] Termites may rely on their fortified mounds for protection or use underground or wide spreading tunnels to escape.[47]

Other prey include the larvae of beetles and western honey bees. Anteaters may target termite mounds with bee hives.[19] Captive anteaters are fed mixtures of milk and eggs as well as mealworms and ground beef.[42] To drink, an anteater may dig for water when none at the surface is available, creating waterholes for other animals.[44]

Reproduction and parenting edit

 
Mother with offspring clinging to her back

Giant anteaters mate all year.[19] A male trails an estrous female, who partially raises her tail. Courting pairs are known to share the same insect nest during feeding.[41] Mating involves the female laying sideways and the male hunching over. A couple may stay together for up to three days and mate multiple times during that period.[19] Giant anteater have a 170–190 day gestation period[22] which ends with the birth of a single pup.[20] There is some evidence that the species can experience delayed implantation.[48] Females give birth standing upright.[19]

Pups are born weighing 1–2 kg (2.2–4.4 lb) with eyes closed for the first six days. The mother carries its dependent young on its back.[42] The pup camouflages against its mother by aligning its black and white band with hers.[20] The mother grooms and nurses her young, which communicates with her using sharp whistles. After three months, grooming declines and the young starts to eat more solid food. Both grooming and nursing bouts end at 10 months, which is also when the young leaves its mother.[6] They are sexually mature in 2.5–4 years.[42]

Mortality edit

Giant anteaters may live around 15 years in the wild, but can live twice that in captivity.[22] They are preyed on by jaguars and pumas and typically flee from danger by galloping, but if cornered, will rear up on their hind legs and attack with the claws.[6][42][49] The front claws of the giant anteater are formidable weapons, capable of potentially killing a jaguar.[50] The giant anteater is a host of the Acanthocephalan intestinal parasites Gigantorhynchus echinodiscus[51] and Moniliformis monoechinus.[52]

Interactions with humans edit

Attacks edit

Although they are usually not a threat to humans, giant anteaters can inflict severe wounds with their front claws. Between 2010 and 2012, two hunters were killed by giant anteaters in Brazil; in both cases, the attacks appeared to be defensive behaviors.[53] In April 2007, an anteater at the Florencio Varela Zoo slashed and killed a zookeeper with its front claws.[54]

In culture edit

 
Anteater mask and scratcher used by Kayapo boys in their ceremonies

In the mythology and folklore of the indigenous peoples of the Amazon Basin, the giant anteater is depicted as both a trickster and a comical figure due to its appearance. In one Shipib tale, an anteater stole a jaguar's coat after challenging it to a diving contest and left the jaguar with its own pelt. In a Yarabara myth, the evil ogre Ucara is punished by the sun and turned into an anteater so he will have been unable to speak with his long snout and small mouth.[55] The Kayapo people wear masks of various animals and spirits, including the anteater, during naming and initiation ceremonies. They believe women who touched anteater masks or men who fall while wearing them would die or be disabled.[56]

During the Spanish colonization of the Americas, the giant anteater among the native fauna taken to Europe for display. It was popularly thought that there were only female anteaters and they reproduced with their noses, a misconception corrected by naturalist Félix de Azara.[57] In the 20th century, Salvador Dalí wrote imaginatively that the giant anteater "reaches sizes bigger than the horse, possesses enormous ferocity, has exceptional muscle power, is a terrifying animal." Dalí depicted an anteater in the style of The Great Masturbator. It was used as a bookplate for André Breton, who compared the temptations a man experiences in life to what "the tongue of the anteater must offer to the ant."[58]

The 1940 Max Fleischer cartoon Ants in the Plants features a colony of ants fighting off a villainous anteater. It may have been a commentary on France's Maginot Line during the Phoney War.[59] An anteater is also a character in the comic strip B.C. This character was the inspiration for Peter the Anteater, the University of California, Irvine team mascot.[60] In the Stephen King miniseries Kingdom Hospital, the character Antubis appears in the form of an anteater-like creature with razor-sharp teeth.[61]

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External links edit

  • The Online Anteater: information, images, fun facts, and other stuff about the giant anteater 13 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • ARKive –
  • Anteater, Sloth & Armadillo Specialist Group  –
  • Animal Diversity Web  – Myrmecophaga tridactyla Giant anteater

giant, anteater, giant, anteater, myrmecophaga, tridactyla, insectivorous, mammal, native, central, south, america, four, living, species, anteaters, which, largest, member, only, extant, member, genus, myrmecophaga, classified, with, sloths, order, pilosa, th. The giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla is an insectivorous mammal native to Central and South America It is one of four living species of anteaters of which it is the largest member The only extant member of the genus Myrmecophaga it is classified with sloths in the order Pilosa This species is mostly terrestrial in contrast to other living anteaters and sloths which are arboreal or semiarboreal The giant anteater is 182 to 217 cm 5 ft 11 1 2 in to 7 ft 1 1 2 in in length with weights of 33 to 50 kg 73 to 110 lb for males and 27 to 47 kg 60 to 104 lb for females It is recognizable by its elongated snout bushy tail long fore claws and distinctively colored pelage Giant anteater 1 Temporal range Montehermosan Recent 5 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N A specimen at Copenhagen Zoo Denmark 2005 Conservation status Vulnerable IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix II CITES 3 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Pilosa Family Myrmecophagidae Genus MyrmecophagaLinnaeus 1758 4 Species M tridactyla Binomial name Myrmecophaga tridactylaLinnaeus 1758 Range extant possibly extinct Synonyms Myrmecophaga jubata Linnaeus 1766 Falcifer Rehn 1900 5 The giant anteater is found in multiple habitats including grassland and rainforest It forages in open areas and rests in more forested habitats It feeds primarily on ants and termites using its fore claws to dig them up and its long sticky tongue to collect them Though giant anteaters live in overlapping home ranges they are mostly solitary except during mother offspring relationships aggressive interactions between males and when mating Mother anteaters carry their offspring on their backs until weaning them The giant anteater is listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature It has been extirpated from many parts of its former range Threats to its survival include habitat destruction fire and poaching for fur and bushmeat although some anteaters inhabit protected areas With its distinctive appearance and habits the anteater has been featured in pre Columbian myths and folktales as well as modern popular culture Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Characteristics 2 1 Feeding anatomy 3 Distribution and status 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Spacing 4 2 Foraging 4 3 Reproduction and parenting 4 4 Mortality 5 Interactions with humans 5 1 Attacks 5 2 In culture 6 References 7 External linksTaxonomy editThe giant anteater got its binomial name from Carl Linnaeus in 1758 Its generic name Myrmecophaga and specific name tridactyla are both Greek meaning anteater and three fingers respectively 6 Myrmecophaga jubata was used as a synonym Three subspecies have been suggested M t tridactyla Venezuela and the Guianas south to northern Argentina M t centralis Central America to northwestern Colombia and northern Ecuador and M t artata northeastern Colombia and northwestern Venezuela The giant anteater is grouped with the semiarboreal northern and southern tamanduas in the family Myrmecophagidae Together with the family Cyclopedidae whose only extant member is the arboreal silky anteater the two families comprise the suborder Vermilingua 7 Anteaters and sloths belong to order Pilosa and share superorder Xenarthra cladogram below 8 with the Cingulata whose only extant members are armadillos The two orders of Xenarthra split 66 million years ago Mya during the Late Cretaceous epoch Anteaters and sloths diverged around 55 Mya between the Paleocene and Eocene epochs The lineages of Cyclopes and other extant anteaters split around 40 Mya in the Oligocene epoch while the last common ancestor of Myrmecophaga and Tamandua existed 10 Mya in the Late Miocene subepoch 8 Though most of their evolutionary history anteaters were confined to South America which was formerly an island continent Following the formation of the Isthmus of Panama about 3 Mya anteaters of all three extant genera invaded Central America as part of the Great American Interchange 9 Sloths Bradypus Choloepus Anteaters Cyclopes Tamandua Myrmecophaga Armadillos Dasypus Priodontes Cabassous Tolypeutes Chaetophractus Euphractus Zaedyus The fossil record for anteaters is generally sparse 10 Known fossils include the Pliocene genus Palaeomyrmidon a close relative to the silky anteater Protamandua which is closer to the giant anteater and the tamanduas from the Miocene and Neotamandua which is believed have close affinities to Myrmecophaga 11 Protamandua was larger than the silky anteater but smaller than a tamandua while Neotamandua was larger falling somewhere between a tamandua and a giant anteater Protamandua did not appear to be specialized for walking or climbing but it may have had a prehensile tail Neotamandua though is unlikely to have had a prehensile tail and its feet were similar in form to both the tamanduas and the giant anteater 10 The species Neotamandua borealis was suggested to be an ancestor of the latter 12 Another member of the genus Myrmecophaga has been recovered from the Montehermosan Monte Hermoso Formation in Argentina and was described by Kraglievitch in 1934 as Nunezia caroloameghinoi 13 The species was reclassified as Myrmecophaga caroloameghinoi by S E Hirschfeld in 1976 12 The giant anteater is the most terrestrial of the living anteater species specialization for life on the ground appears to be a new trait in anteater evolution The transition to life on the ground could have been aided by the expansion of open habitats such as savanna in South America and the abundance of native colonial insects such as termites that provided a larger potential food source Both the giant anteater and the southern tamandua are well represented in the fossil record of the late Pleistocene and early Holocene 10 Characteristics edit nbsp Side view nbsp Mounted skeleton nbsp Skull of a giant anteater The giant anteater can be identified by its large size long narrow muzzle and long bushy tail 14 It has a total body length of 182 to 217 cm 5 ft 11 1 2 in to 7 ft 1 1 2 in Males weigh 33 to 50 kg 73 to 110 lb and females weigh 27 to 47 kg 60 to 104 lb 6 15 16 making the giant anteater the biggest extant species in its suborder The head of the giant anteater at 30 cm 12 in long 17 is particularly elongated even when compared to other anteaters 18 Its cylindrical snout takes up most of its head Its eyes ears and mouth are relatively small 6 It has poor eyesight 14 but has a powerful sense of smell 40 times that of a human 19 While there is some difference in size and shape between the sexes males being larger and more robust telling them apart from a distance can be difficult The male s genitals are located within its body and upon closer examination its urogenital opening is smaller and farther from the anus 20 21 The female s two mammary glands are located between the front legs 20 Even for an anteater the neck is especially thick compared to the back of the head 18 and a small hump protrudes behind the neck The coat is mostly greyish brown or black with mottled white They have white front legs with black ringed wrists and hands and dark hind legs From the throat to the shoulders is a thick black mark with white outlines and sharp tips The body ends in a brown tail The coat hairs are long especially on the tail which makes the appendage look larger than it actually is An erect mane stretches along the back 6 22 The bold pattern was thought to be disruptive camouflage but a 2009 study suggests it is warning coloration 23 The giant anteater has broad ribs It has five toes on each foot 6 Three toes on the front feet have claws which are particularly large on the third digits 22 It walks on its front knuckles similar to gorillas and chimpanzees This allows the giant anteater to walk without scraping its claws on the ground The middle digits which support most of its weight have long metacarpophalangeal joints and bent interphalangeal joints 24 Unlike the front feet the hind feet have short claws on all five toes and walk plantigrade 6 As a hook and pull digger the giant anteater has a large supraspinous fossa which gives the teres major more leverage increasing the front limbs pulling power and the triceps muscle helps control the thickened middle digit 25 The giant anteater has a low body temperature for a mammal about 33 C 91 F a few degrees lower than a typical mammalian temperature of 36 to 38 C 97 to 100 F 19 Xenarthrans in general tend to have lower metabolic rates than most other mammals a trend thought to correlate with their dietary specializations and low mobility 26 Feeding anatomy edit nbsp Anteater with tongue extended The giant anteater has no teeth and is capable of very limited jaw movement It relies on the rotation of the two halves of its lower jaw held together by a ligament connecting the rami to open and close its mouth This is accomplished by its chewing muscles which are relatively underdeveloped Jaw depression creates an oral opening large enough for the slender tongue to flick out 18 27 It has a length of around 60 cm 24 in 6 and is more triangular in the back but becomes more rounded towards the front and ends in a rounded tip 18 28 The tongue has backward curving papillae and is extremely moist due to the large salivary glands 17 The tongue can only move forwards and backwards due to the tiny mouth and shape of the snout During feeding the animal relies on the direction of its head for aim When fully extended the tongue reaches 45 cm 18 in and can move in and out around 160 times per minute nearly three times per second 18 A unique sternoglossus muscle a combination of the sternohyoid and the hyoglossus anchors the tongue directly to the sternum 18 29 28 30 The hyoid apparatus is large V shaped and flexible and supports the tongue as it moves 18 28 31 The buccinator muscles loosen and tighten allowing food in and preventing it from falling out When retracted the tongue is held in the oropharynx preventing it from blocking respiration 18 The anteater rubs its tongue against its palate to smash the insects for swallowing 17 Unlike other mammals giant anteaters swallow almost constantly when feeding 18 The giant anteater s stomach similar to a bird s gizzard has hardened folds to crush food assisted by some sand and soil 20 The giant anteater cannot produce stomach acid of its own but digests using the formic acid of its prey 17 Distribution and status edit nbsp In the grasslands of Serra da Canastra National Park Brazil The giant anteater is native to Central and South America its known range stretches from Honduras to Bolivia and northern Argentina 22 and fossil remains have been found as far north as northwestern Sonora Mexico 9 It is largely absent from the Andes 6 and has been fully extirpated in Uruguay Belize El Salvador and Guatemala as well as in parts of Costa Rica Brazil Argentina and Paraguay 2 The species can live in both tropical rainforests and arid shrublands 14 provided enough prey is present to sustain it 32 The species is listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature due to the number of regional extirpations 2 and under Appendix II by CITES tightly restricting international trade in specimens 3 By 2014 the total population declined more than 30 percent over the last three generations 2 In 1994 some 340 giant anteaters died due to wildfires at Emas National Park in Brazil 33 The animal is particularly vulnerable to fires as its coat can easily catch ablaze and it is too slow to escape 6 Human induced threats include collision with vehicles attacks by dogs and destruction of habitat 32 One study of anteater mortality along roads found that they are likely to be struck on linear roads near native plants 34 A 2018 study in Brazil found that 1 roads were more likely to be detrimental to anteaters because of habitat fragmentation rather than vehicle accidents 2 18 20 of satisfactory anteater habitat did not reach minimum patch size 3 0 1 1 of its range had dangerously high road density 4 32 36 of the anteater s distribution represented critical areas for its survival and 5 more conservation opportunities existed in the north of the country 35 A 2020 study in the Brazilian cerrado found that road mortality can cut population growth by 50 percent at the local level 36 The giant anteater is commonly hunted in Bolivia both as a trophy and food The animal s thick leathery hide is used to make horse riding equipment in the Chaco In Venezuela it is slain for its claws Giant anteaters are also killed for their perceived danger particularly during threat displays The biggest ecological strengths of the species is its wide range and adaptability The Amazon Pantanal and the cerrado have various protected areas where the anteater finds refuge 32 In Argentina some local governments list it as national heritage species affording it official protection 2 Behaviour and ecology edit nbsp Sleeping under its tail Despite its iconic status the giant anteater is little studied in the wild and research has been limited to certain areas 37 The species may use multiple habitats A 2007 study of giant anteaters in the Brazilian Pantanal found that the animals move and forage in open areas and rest in forest the latter provide shade when the temperature rises and retain heat when the temperature drops 38 Anteaters may travel an average of 3 700 m 12 100 ft per day 39 Giant anteaters can be either diurnal or nocturnal A 2006 study in the Pantanal found them to be mostly nocturnal when it is warm but became more active in daylight hours as the temperature dropped 40 Diurnal giant anteaters have been observed at Serra da Canastra 41 Nocturnality in anteaters may be a response to human disturbances 42 Giant anteaters prefer dense brush to sleep in but when it gets cooler they may use tall grass When they need to rest they carve a shallow cavity in the ground The animal sleeps curled up with its bushy tail over its body both to keep it warm and camouflage it from predators One anteater was recorded sleeping flat on its side with the tail unfolded on a 17 C 63 F morning possibly to allow its body to absorb the sun s rays for warmth 43 Giant anteaters sometimes enter water to bathe 44 and even swim across wide rivers 6 They are also able to climb and have been recorded ascending both termite mounds and trees while foraging One individual was observed attempting to climb a tree by rearing up and grabbing onto a branch above it 45 Spacing edit nbsp Two captive anteaters The species is generally solitary in the wild Giant anteater home ranges vary in size depending on the location ranging as small as 2 7 km2 667 acres in Serra da Canastra National Park Brazil to as large as 32 5 km2 8 031 acres in Ibera Natural Reserve Argentina 39 Individuals mostly live alone aside from young who stay with their mothers 41 Anteaters keep in contact with secretions from their anal glands and tree markings 38 46 They appear to be able to recognize each other s saliva by scent 19 Females are more tolerant of each other than males are and thus are more likely to be found closer together Males are more likely to engage in agonistic behaviors 41 which start with the combatants approaching and circling each other while uttering a harrr noise This can escalate into chasing and actual fighting Combat includes wrestling and slashing with the claws 6 19 Fighting anteaters may emit roars or bellows 41 Males are possibly territorial 19 Foraging edit nbsp Foraging This animal is an insectivore feeding mostly on ants or termites In areas that experience regular flooding like the Pantanal and the Venezuelan Colombian Llanos anteaters mainly feed on ants because termites are less available 19 Conversely anteaters at Emas National Park eat mainly termites which are numerous in the grassland habitat At Serra da Canastra during the wet season October to March anteaters eat mainly ants while during the dry season May to September they switch to termites 19 Anteaters track prey by their scent 14 After finding a nest the animal tears it open with its claws and inserts its long sticky tongue to collect its prey which includes eggs larvae and adult insects 22 17 An anteater attacks up to 200 nests in one day for as long as a minute each and consumes a total of around 35 000 insects 20 17 The anteater may be driven away from a nest by the chemical or biting attacks of soldiers 14 Termites may rely on their fortified mounds for protection or use underground or wide spreading tunnels to escape 47 Other prey include the larvae of beetles and western honey bees Anteaters may target termite mounds with bee hives 19 Captive anteaters are fed mixtures of milk and eggs as well as mealworms and ground beef 42 To drink an anteater may dig for water when none at the surface is available creating waterholes for other animals 44 Reproduction and parenting edit nbsp Mother with offspring clinging to her back Giant anteaters mate all year 19 A male trails an estrous female who partially raises her tail Courting pairs are known to share the same insect nest during feeding 41 Mating involves the female laying sideways and the male hunching over A couple may stay together for up to three days and mate multiple times during that period 19 Giant anteater have a 170 190 day gestation period 22 which ends with the birth of a single pup 20 There is some evidence that the species can experience delayed implantation 48 Females give birth standing upright 19 Pups are born weighing 1 2 kg 2 2 4 4 lb with eyes closed for the first six days The mother carries its dependent young on its back 42 The pup camouflages against its mother by aligning its black and white band with hers 20 The mother grooms and nurses her young which communicates with her using sharp whistles After three months grooming declines and the young starts to eat more solid food Both grooming and nursing bouts end at 10 months which is also when the young leaves its mother 6 They are sexually mature in 2 5 4 years 42 Mortality edit Giant anteaters may live around 15 years in the wild but can live twice that in captivity 22 They are preyed on by jaguars and pumas and typically flee from danger by galloping but if cornered will rear up on their hind legs and attack with the claws 6 42 49 The front claws of the giant anteater are formidable weapons capable of potentially killing a jaguar 50 The giant anteater is a host of the Acanthocephalan intestinal parasites Gigantorhynchus echinodiscus 51 and Moniliformis monoechinus 52 Interactions with humans editAttacks edit Although they are usually not a threat to humans giant anteaters can inflict severe wounds with their front claws Between 2010 and 2012 two hunters were killed by giant anteaters in Brazil in both cases the attacks appeared to be defensive behaviors 53 In April 2007 an anteater at the Florencio Varela Zoo slashed and killed a zookeeper with its front claws 54 In culture edit nbsp Anteater mask and scratcher used by Kayapo boys in their ceremonies In the mythology and folklore of the indigenous peoples of the Amazon Basin the giant anteater is depicted as both a trickster and a comical figure due to its appearance In one Shipib tale an anteater stole a jaguar s coat after challenging it to a diving contest and left the jaguar with its own pelt In a Yarabara myth the evil ogre Ucara is punished by the sun and turned into an anteater so he will have been unable to speak with his long snout and small mouth 55 The Kayapo people wear masks of various animals and spirits including the anteater during naming and initiation ceremonies They believe women who touched anteater masks or men who fall while wearing them would die or be disabled 56 During the Spanish colonization of the Americas the giant anteater among the native fauna taken to Europe for display It was popularly thought that there were only female anteaters and they reproduced with their noses a misconception corrected by naturalist Felix de Azara 57 In the 20th century Salvador Dali wrote imaginatively that the giant anteater reaches sizes bigger than the horse possesses enormous ferocity has exceptional muscle power is a terrifying animal Dali depicted an anteater in the style of The Great Masturbator It was used as a bookplate for Andre Breton who compared the temptations a man experiences in life to what the tongue of the anteater must offer to the ant 58 The 1940 Max Fleischer cartoon Ants in the Plants features a colony of ants fighting off a villainous anteater It may have been a commentary on France s Maginot Line during the Phoney War 59 An anteater is also a character in the comic strip B C This character was the inspiration for Peter the Anteater the University of California Irvine team mascot 60 In the Stephen King miniseries Kingdom Hospital the character Antubis appears in the form of an anteater like creature with razor sharp teeth 61 References edit Gardner A L 2005 Order Pilosa In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 102 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b c d e 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 a b Appendices CITES cites org Archived from the original on 5 December 2017 Retrieved 14 January 2022 Linnaeus Carl 1758 Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonyms locis Tomus I in Latin 10th ed Holmiae Laurentius Salvius p 35 Archived from the original on 8 November 2012 Retrieved 23 November 2012 Smith P 2007 Giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla Linnaeus 1758 FAUNA Paraguay pp 1 18 Archived from the original on 25 October 2022 Retrieved 7 March 2019 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite 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doi 10 1016 j ijppaw 2019 09 008 PMC 6906829 PMID 31867208 Amin Omar M Heckmann Richard A Osama Mohammed Evans R Paul 2016 Morphological and molecular descriptions of Moniliformis saudi sp n Acanthocephala Moniliformidae from the desert hedgehog Paraechinus aethiopicus Ehrenberg in Saudi Arabia with a key to species and notes on histopathology Folia Parasitologica 63 doi 10 14411 fp 2016 014 ISSN 0015 5683 PMID 27189420 Haddad V Reckziegal G C Neto D G Pimentel F L 2014 Human Death Caused by a Giant Anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla in Brazil Wilderness and Environmental Medicine 24 4 446 449 doi 10 1016 j wem 2014 04 008 PMID 25027752 Argentine zookeeper dies after anteater attack Reuters 12 April 2007 Archived from the original on 21 September 2021 Retrieved 3 May 2020 Roe P G 1982 The Cosmic Zygote Cosmology in the Amazon Basin Rutgers University Press pp 189 191 ISBN 0 8135 0896 7 Mascia Lees F E 2011 A Companion to the Anthropology of the Body and Embodiment John Wiley amp Sons p 112 ISBN 978 1 4051 8949 1 Cowie H 2011 Sloth bones and anteater tongues Collecting American nature in the Hispanic world 1750 1808 Atlantic Studies 8 1 5 27 doi 10 1080 14788810 2011 540864 S2CID 164122848 Fanes F 2007 Salvador Dali The Construction of the Image 1925 1930 Yale University Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 300 09179 3 Shull M S Wilt D E 2004 Doing Their Bit Wartime American Animated Short Films 1939 1945 McFarland p 98 ISBN 0 7864 1555 X The Anteater Mascot Anteater Chronicles The UC Irvine Story Archived from the original on 9 January 2013 Retrieved 25 June 2012 Browning M 2011 Stephen King on the Small Screen Intellect Books p 122 ISBN 978 1 84150 412 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Myrmecophaga tridactyla category nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Myrmecophaga tridactyla The Online Anteater information images fun facts and other stuff about the giant anteater Archived 13 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine ARKive images and movies of the giant anteater Anteater Sloth amp Armadillo Specialist Group Giant anteater Animal Diversity Web Myrmecophaga tridactyla Giant anteater Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Giant anteater amp oldid 1220012471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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