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Oryzomys gorgasi

Oryzomys gorgasi, also known as Gorgas's oryzomys[4] or Gorgas's rice rat,[1] is a rodent in the genus Oryzomys of family Cricetidae. First recorded in 1967, it is known from only a few localities, including a freshwater swamp in the lowlands of northwestern Colombia and a mangrove islet in northwestern Venezuela. It reportedly formerly occurred on the island of Curaçao off northwestern Venezuela; this extinct population has been described as a separate species, Oryzomys curasoae, but does not differ morphologically from mainland populations.

Oryzomys gorgasi
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Cricetidae
Subfamily: Sigmodontinae
Genus: Oryzomys
Species:
O. gorgasi
Binomial name
Oryzomys gorgasi
Distribution of Oryzomys gorgasi (blue) and the related O. couesi (red) in northwestern South America.
Synonyms[3]
  • Oryzomys curasoae McFarlane and Debrot, 2001[2]

Oryzomys gorgasi is a medium-sized, brownish species with large, semiaquatically specialized feet. It differs from other Oryzomys species in several features of its skull. Its diet includes crustaceans, insects, and plant material. The species is listed as "Endangered" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as a result of destruction of its habitat and competition with the introduced black rat (Rattus rattus).

Taxonomy

Oryzomys gorgasi was first found in Antioquia Department of northwestern Colombia in 1967 during an expedition by the U.S. Army Medical Department and the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory. In 1971, Field Museum zoologist Philip Hershkovitz described a new species, Oryzomys gorgasi, on the basis of the single known specimen, an old male. He named the animal after physician William Crawford Gorgas, the namesake of the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory.[5] Hershkovitz considered the new species most closely related to Oryzomys palustris, which at the time included North and Central American populations now divided into several species, including the marsh rice rat (O. palustris) and O. couesi.[6] The species was not recorded again until 2001, when Venezuelan zoologist J. Sánchez H. and coworkers reported on 11 specimens collected in coastal northwestern Venezuela in 1992, 700 km (430 mi) from the Colombian locality.[7] They confirmed that O. gorgasi is a distinct species related to the O. palustris group.[8]

In 2001, Donald McFarlane and Adolphe Debrot described a new Oryzomys species from the Dutch island of Curaçao off northwestern Venezuela. For their description, they used subfossil material from owl pellets, including two partial skulls and several hemimandibles. They referred the species to Oecomys,[9] a group of arboreal (tree-living), mainly South American rodents related to Oryzomys.[10] O. curasoae has also been known as the "Curaçao Rice Rat"[11] and the "Curaçao Oryzomys".[4]

Marcelo Weksler and colleagues removed most of the species then placed in Oryzomys from the genus in 2006, retaining only the marsh rice rat and related species, including O. gorgasi. They also kept O. curasoae in the genus and suggested that it may not be distinct from O. gorgasi.[12] In a 2009 paper, R.S. Voss and Weksler examined the two and concluded that they represented the same species on the basis of direct comparisons and a phylogenetic analysis.[3] The resultant tree placed O. curasoae and O. gorgasi sister to each other and closer to O. couesi than to the marsh rice rat.[13] Accordingly, they placed O. curasoae as a junior synonym of the earlier described O. gorgasi.[14]

Oryzomys gorgasi is the southeasternmost representative of the genus Oryzomys, which extends north into the eastern United States (marsh rice rat, O. palustris).[15] O. gorgasi is further part of the O. couesi section, which is centered on the widespread Central American O. couesi and also includes six other species with more limited and peripheral distributions.[16] Many aspects of the systematics of the O. couesi section remain unclear and it is likely that the current classification underestimates the true diversity of the group.[17] Oryzomys is classified in the tribe Oryzomyini, a diverse assemblage of American rodents of over a hundred species,[18] and on higher taxonomic levels in the subfamily Sigmodontinae of family Cricetidae, along with hundreds of other species of mainly small rodents.[19]

Description

 
The marsh rice rat (Oryzomys palustris) is highly similar to O. gorgasi.[20]

Oryzomys gorgasi is a medium-sized oryzomyine[21] with small ears and large feet,[22] and is similar to the marsh rice rat in general appearance.[20] The long and coarse fur is brownish above and ochraceous below.[22] At the base of the tail, the upper and lower sides differ in color and at the end is a short tuft of hairs. The scales on the tail are well-developed. As in other Oryzomys, the hindfeet exhibit specializations for life in the water. The plantar (lower) surface of the metatarsus is naked. Two of the pads are very small. Ungual tufts, tufts of hair at the bases of the claws, are poorly developed. Interdigital webbing is present, but extends along less than half of the first phalanges.[20]

In specimens from El Caimito, total length is 220 to 290 mm (8.7 to 11.4 in), averaging 259 mm (10.2 in) (measured in 6 specimens); tail length is 116 to 138 mm (4.6 to 5.4 in), averaging 130 mm (5.1 in) (measured in 8 specimens); hindfoot length is 30 to 32 mm (1.2 to 1.3 in), averaging 31 mm (1.2 in) (measured in 10 specimens); ear length is 15 to 17 mm (0.59 to 0.67 in), averaging 16 mm (0.63 in) (measured in 7 specimens); and condylo-incisive length (a measure of total skull size) is 26.9 to 31.4 mm (1.06 to 1.24 in), averaging 29.6 mm (1.17 in) (measured in 5 specimens). In the holotype from Colombia, an old male, total length is 240 mm (9.4 in); tail length is 125 mm (4.9 in); ear length is 19 mm (0.75 in); and condylo-incisive length is 32.1 mm (1.26 in).[23] The collector recorded the holotype's hindfoot as being 34 mm (1.3 in) long, but Sánchez and colleagues remeasured it as 33 mm (1.3 in).[24]

The rostrum (front part of the skull) is short. The broad zygomatic plate develops a prominent notch, but not a spine, on its front end, and its back margin is in front of the first molars. The interorbital region, located between the eyes, is narrowest towards the front and is flanked by beadings along its margins. The interparietal bone is relatively long. The incisive foramina, perforations of the palate between the incisors and the molars, are narrow and long and taper towards the end. The palate itself is also long, extending beyond the molars, and includes prominent posterolateral palatal pits near the third molars, which are excavated into deep fossae. The roof of the mesopterygoid fossa, the opening behind the palate, is not perforated by sphenopalatine vacuities. O. gorgasi lacks an alisphenoid strut; in some other oryzomyines, this extension of the alisphenoid bone separates two openings in the skull, the masticatory–buccinator foramen and the foramen ovale accessorium. The squamosal bone lacks a suspensory process that contacts the tegmen tympani, the roof of the tympanic cavity,[25] a defining character of oryzomyines.[26] The subsquamosal fenestra, an opening at the back of the skull determined by the shape of the squamosal, is almost absent.[27]

In the mandible (lower jaw), the upper and lower masseteric ridges come close together below the first molars, but do not fuse. The back end of the lower incisor root is in a capsular process, a raising of the mandibular bone behind the molars. The upper incisors have yellowish enamel and are opisthodont, with the cutting edge inclined backwards. The molars are relatively small and are brachydont (low-crowned) and bunodont (with the cusps higher than the connecting crests). They are similar to those of the marsh rice rat in structural details. The upper and lower first molars have small accessory roots, as in many other oryzomyines, and the second and third lower molar each have two roots only.[28]

Oryzomys gorgasi is distinguished from other Oryzomys species by its short rostrum, the form of its incisive foramina, the absence of sphenopalatine vacuities, and the near absence of a subsquamosal fenestra.[8] Within the species, the Colombian specimen differs from the Venezuelan animals in being larger in some measurements, but having smaller teeth, and in having oddly shaped wear facets of the incisors. The Colombian animal was probably kept in captivity for some time after it was caught, which would explain its large size and odd wear facets.[20] There are no substantial differences between mainland O. gorgasi and material from Curaçao.[29]

Distribution and ecology

As far as known, Oryzomys gorgasi has a disjunct distribution in northwestern South America, including Colombia, Venezuela, and Curaçao.[30] In a 2009 paper, Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales speculated that its distribution may extend into Central America.[31] The Colombian population is known from the holotype only, caught at Loma Teguerre (7°54'N, 77°W) in Antioquia Department, northwestern Colombia, near the Río Atrato, at about 1 m above sea level.[5] The location is apparently a freshwater swamp,[8] and Hershkovitz suggested that O. gorgasi probably occurred throughout the swamp forests in the Río Atrato basin.[21] On Curaçao, it is known from cave faunas at Tafelberg Santa Barbara, Noordkant, Ser'i Kura, and Hermanus. At Tafelberg Santa Barbara, it was found in association with introduced black rats (Rattus rattus), indicating that the population persisted at least until the first European contact in 1499.[2]

In Venezuela, it was found on El Caimito, a small (57 ha, 140 acres) islet just east of the outlet of Lake Maracaibo in the state of Zulia,[32] where the only other native non-flying mammal is the opossum Marmosa robinsoni.[33] El Caimito is separated from the mainland by a narrow, brackish channel and contains sand banks with xerophytic vegetation surrounded by marshy lagoons with Rhizospora mangle mangroves.[8] Oryzomys gorgasi was caught in all habitats on the islet, but has not been found in other similar sites in northwestern Venezuela, where the introduced black rat is the only rodent collected. Analysis of stomach contents of El Caimito specimens indicates that the species is an omnivore, with a diet including crustaceans, insects, plant seeds, and other plant material. The crustaceans may include fiddler crabs (Uca) and a mangrove tree crab of the genus Aratus; the insects include flies (Diptera); and the plants include grass seeds. Two parasitic nematodes, Litomosoides sigmodontis (family Onchocercidae) and an undetermined species of Pterygodermatites (family Rictulariidae), are known to infect O. gorgasi.[33] The 2009 IUCN Red List tersely indicates that the species has been found in a second Venezuelan locality.[1]

Conservation status

On the 2017 IUCN Red List, O. gorgasi is listed as "endangered"[1] and O. curasoae as "data deficient".[11] The species may be threatened by competition with introduced black rats[34] and destruction of its habitat,[35] but does occur in at least one protected area. Displacement by the black rat has caused the species to become locally extinct in parts of its Venezuelan range.[1] Suitable habitats for O. gorgasi exist in inland Venezuela, and further study is needed to determine whether it is present there.[33] The extinction of the Curaçao population may also have been caused by competition with the black rat, which has been found together with Oryzomys in subfossil deposits.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Weksler and Timm, 2018
  2. ^ a b McFarlane and Debrot, 2001, p. 182
  3. ^ a b c Voss and Weksler, 2009, p. 78
  4. ^ a b Musser and Carleton, 2005, p. 1148
  5. ^ a b Hershkovitz, 1971, p. 700
  6. ^ Hershkovitz, 1971, p. 707; Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales, 2009, p. 116
  7. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 206
  8. ^ a b c d Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 210
  9. ^ McFarlane and Debrot, 2001, p. 184
  10. ^ Weksler, 2006
  11. ^ a b Lamoreux, 2008
  12. ^ Weksler et al., 2006, table 1, footnote e
  13. ^ Voss and Weksler, 2009, fig. 1
  14. ^ Voss and Weksler, 2009, p. 73
  15. ^ Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales, 2009, p. 106
  16. ^ Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales, 2009, p. 117
  17. ^ Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales, 2009, p. 107
  18. ^ Weksler, 2006, p. 3
  19. ^ Musser and Carleton, 2005
  20. ^ a b c d Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 208
  21. ^ a b Hershkovitz, 1971, p. 701
  22. ^ a b Hershkovitz, 1971, p. 702
  23. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, table 1
  24. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 207
  25. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, pp. 208–209; Voss and Weksler, 2009, p. 75
  26. ^ Weksler, 2006, p. 40
  27. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 209
  28. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 209; Voss and Weksler, 2009, pp. 75, 77
  29. ^ Voss and Weksler, 2009, p. 77
  30. ^ Voss and Weksler, 2009, pp. 74, 78
  31. ^ Carleton and Arroyo-Cabrales, 2009, p. 113
  32. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 210; Voss and Weksler, 2009, p. 74
  33. ^ a b c Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 211
  34. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 211; Weksler and Timm, 2018
  35. ^ Sánchez et al., 2001, p. 205

Literature cited

  • Carleton, M.D.; Arroyo-Cabrales, J. (2009). "Review of the Oryzomys couesi Complex (Rodentia: Cricetidae: Sigmodontinae) in Western Mexico" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 331: 94–127. doi:10.1206/582-3.1. S2CID 42256389.
  • Hershkovitz, P. (1971). "A New Rice Rat of the Oryzomys palustris Group (Cricetinae, Muridae) from Northwestern Colombia, with Remarks on Distribution". Journal of Mammalogy. 52 (4): 700–709. doi:10.2307/1378917. JSTOR 1378917.
  • McFarlane, D.A.; Debrot, A.O. (2001). . Caribbean Journal of Science. 37 (3–4): 182–184. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011.
  • Musser, G.G.; Carleton, M.D. (2005). "Superfamily Muroidea.". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic reference (3rd ed.). Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 894–1531 [1148–1149]. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0.
  • Sánchez H., J.; Ochoa G., J.; Voss, R.S. (2001). "Rediscovery of Oryzomys gorgasi (Rodentia: Muridae). With Notes on Taxonomy and Natural History". Mammalia. 65 (2): 205–214. doi:10.1515/mamm.2001.65.2.205. S2CID 85316706.
  • Voss, R.S.; Weksler, M.W. (2009). "On the taxonomic status of Oryzomys curasoae McFarlane and Debrot, 2001, (Rodentia: Cricetidae: Sigmodontinae) with remarks on the phylogenetic relationships of O. gorgasi Hershkovitz, 1971". Caribbean Journal of Science. 45 (1): 73–79. doi:10.18475/cjos.v45i1.a11. S2CID 87520473.
  • Weksler, M. (2006). "Phylogenetic Relationships of Oryzomine [sic] Rodents (Muroidea: Sigmodontinae): Separate and Combined Analyses of Morphological and Molecular Data". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 296: 1–149. doi:10.1206/0003-0090(2006)296[0001:PROORM]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 86057173.
  • Weksler, M.; Percequillo, A.R.; Voss, R.S. (2006). "Ten New Genera of Oryzomyine Rodents (Cricetidae: Sigmodontinae)". American Museum Novitates (3537): 1–29. doi:10.1206/0003-0082(2006)3537[1:TNGOOR]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 84088556.
  • Weksler, M.; Timm, R. (2018) [errata version of 2018 assessment]. "Oryzomys gorgasi". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T115554360A22387922.en.

oryzomys, gorgasi, also, known, gorgas, oryzomys, gorgas, rice, rodent, genus, oryzomys, family, cricetidae, first, recorded, 1967, known, from, only, localities, including, freshwater, swamp, lowlands, northwestern, colombia, mangrove, islet, northwestern, ve. Oryzomys gorgasi also known as Gorgas s oryzomys 4 or Gorgas s rice rat 1 is a rodent in the genus Oryzomys of family Cricetidae First recorded in 1967 it is known from only a few localities including a freshwater swamp in the lowlands of northwestern Colombia and a mangrove islet in northwestern Venezuela It reportedly formerly occurred on the island of Curacao off northwestern Venezuela this extinct population has been described as a separate species Oryzomys curasoae but does not differ morphologically from mainland populations Oryzomys gorgasiConservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder RodentiaFamily CricetidaeSubfamily SigmodontinaeGenus OryzomysSpecies O gorgasiBinomial nameOryzomys gorgasiHershkovitz 1971Distribution of Oryzomys gorgasi blue and the related O couesi red in northwestern South America Synonyms 3 Oryzomys curasoae McFarlane and Debrot 2001 2 Oryzomys gorgasi is a medium sized brownish species with large semiaquatically specialized feet It differs from other Oryzomys species in several features of its skull Its diet includes crustaceans insects and plant material The species is listed as Endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as a result of destruction of its habitat and competition with the introduced black rat Rattus rattus Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution and ecology 4 Conservation status 5 References 6 Literature citedTaxonomy EditOryzomys gorgasi was first found in Antioquia Department of northwestern Colombia in 1967 during an expedition by the U S Army Medical Department and the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory In 1971 Field Museum zoologist Philip Hershkovitz described a new species Oryzomys gorgasi on the basis of the single known specimen an old male He named the animal after physician William Crawford Gorgas the namesake of the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory 5 Hershkovitz considered the new species most closely related to Oryzomys palustris which at the time included North and Central American populations now divided into several species including the marsh rice rat O palustris and O couesi 6 The species was not recorded again until 2001 when Venezuelan zoologist J Sanchez H and coworkers reported on 11 specimens collected in coastal northwestern Venezuela in 1992 700 km 430 mi from the Colombian locality 7 They confirmed that O gorgasi is a distinct species related to the O palustris group 8 In 2001 Donald McFarlane and Adolphe Debrot described a new Oryzomys species from the Dutch island of Curacao off northwestern Venezuela For their description they used subfossil material from owl pellets including two partial skulls and several hemimandibles They referred the species to Oecomys 9 a group of arboreal tree living mainly South American rodents related to Oryzomys 10 O curasoae has also been known as the Curacao Rice Rat 11 and the Curacao Oryzomys 4 Marcelo Weksler and colleagues removed most of the species then placed in Oryzomys from the genus in 2006 retaining only the marsh rice rat and related species including O gorgasi They also kept O curasoae in the genus and suggested that it may not be distinct from O gorgasi 12 In a 2009 paper R S Voss and Weksler examined the two and concluded that they represented the same species on the basis of direct comparisons and a phylogenetic analysis 3 The resultant tree placed O curasoae and O gorgasi sister to each other and closer to O couesi than to the marsh rice rat 13 Accordingly they placed O curasoae as a junior synonym of the earlier described O gorgasi 14 Oryzomys gorgasi is the southeasternmost representative of the genus Oryzomys which extends north into the eastern United States marsh rice rat O palustris 15 O gorgasi is further part of the O couesi section which is centered on the widespread Central American O couesi and also includes six other species with more limited and peripheral distributions 16 Many aspects of the systematics of the O couesi section remain unclear and it is likely that the current classification underestimates the true diversity of the group 17 Oryzomys is classified in the tribe Oryzomyini a diverse assemblage of American rodents of over a hundred species 18 and on higher taxonomic levels in the subfamily Sigmodontinae of family Cricetidae along with hundreds of other species of mainly small rodents 19 Description Edit The marsh rice rat Oryzomys palustris is highly similar to O gorgasi 20 Oryzomys gorgasi is a medium sized oryzomyine 21 with small ears and large feet 22 and is similar to the marsh rice rat in general appearance 20 The long and coarse fur is brownish above and ochraceous below 22 At the base of the tail the upper and lower sides differ in color and at the end is a short tuft of hairs The scales on the tail are well developed As in other Oryzomys the hindfeet exhibit specializations for life in the water The plantar lower surface of the metatarsus is naked Two of the pads are very small Ungual tufts tufts of hair at the bases of the claws are poorly developed Interdigital webbing is present but extends along less than half of the first phalanges 20 In specimens from El Caimito total length is 220 to 290 mm 8 7 to 11 4 in averaging 259 mm 10 2 in measured in 6 specimens tail length is 116 to 138 mm 4 6 to 5 4 in averaging 130 mm 5 1 in measured in 8 specimens hindfoot length is 30 to 32 mm 1 2 to 1 3 in averaging 31 mm 1 2 in measured in 10 specimens ear length is 15 to 17 mm 0 59 to 0 67 in averaging 16 mm 0 63 in measured in 7 specimens and condylo incisive length a measure of total skull size is 26 9 to 31 4 mm 1 06 to 1 24 in averaging 29 6 mm 1 17 in measured in 5 specimens In the holotype from Colombia an old male total length is 240 mm 9 4 in tail length is 125 mm 4 9 in ear length is 19 mm 0 75 in and condylo incisive length is 32 1 mm 1 26 in 23 The collector recorded the holotype s hindfoot as being 34 mm 1 3 in long but Sanchez and colleagues remeasured it as 33 mm 1 3 in 24 The rostrum front part of the skull is short The broad zygomatic plate develops a prominent notch but not a spine on its front end and its back margin is in front of the first molars The interorbital region located between the eyes is narrowest towards the front and is flanked by beadings along its margins The interparietal bone is relatively long The incisive foramina perforations of the palate between the incisors and the molars are narrow and long and taper towards the end The palate itself is also long extending beyond the molars and includes prominent posterolateral palatal pits near the third molars which are excavated into deep fossae The roof of the mesopterygoid fossa the opening behind the palate is not perforated by sphenopalatine vacuities O gorgasi lacks an alisphenoid strut in some other oryzomyines this extension of the alisphenoid bone separates two openings in the skull the masticatory buccinator foramen and the foramen ovale accessorium The squamosal bone lacks a suspensory process that contacts the tegmen tympani the roof of the tympanic cavity 25 a defining character of oryzomyines 26 The subsquamosal fenestra an opening at the back of the skull determined by the shape of the squamosal is almost absent 27 In the mandible lower jaw the upper and lower masseteric ridges come close together below the first molars but do not fuse The back end of the lower incisor root is in a capsular process a raising of the mandibular bone behind the molars The upper incisors have yellowish enamel and are opisthodont with the cutting edge inclined backwards The molars are relatively small and are brachydont low crowned and bunodont with the cusps higher than the connecting crests They are similar to those of the marsh rice rat in structural details The upper and lower first molars have small accessory roots as in many other oryzomyines and the second and third lower molar each have two roots only 28 Oryzomys gorgasi is distinguished from other Oryzomys species by its short rostrum the form of its incisive foramina the absence of sphenopalatine vacuities and the near absence of a subsquamosal fenestra 8 Within the species the Colombian specimen differs from the Venezuelan animals in being larger in some measurements but having smaller teeth and in having oddly shaped wear facets of the incisors The Colombian animal was probably kept in captivity for some time after it was caught which would explain its large size and odd wear facets 20 There are no substantial differences between mainland O gorgasi and material from Curacao 29 Distribution and ecology EditAs far as known Oryzomys gorgasi has a disjunct distribution in northwestern South America including Colombia Venezuela and Curacao 30 In a 2009 paper Carleton and Arroyo Cabrales speculated that its distribution may extend into Central America 31 The Colombian population is known from the holotype only caught at Loma Teguerre 7 54 N 77 W in Antioquia Department northwestern Colombia near the Rio Atrato at about 1 m above sea level 5 The location is apparently a freshwater swamp 8 and Hershkovitz suggested that O gorgasi probably occurred throughout the swamp forests in the Rio Atrato basin 21 On Curacao it is known from cave faunas at Tafelberg Santa Barbara Noordkant Ser i Kura and Hermanus At Tafelberg Santa Barbara it was found in association with introduced black rats Rattus rattus indicating that the population persisted at least until the first European contact in 1499 2 In Venezuela it was found on El Caimito a small 57 ha 140 acres islet just east of the outlet of Lake Maracaibo in the state of Zulia 32 where the only other native non flying mammal is the opossum Marmosa robinsoni 33 El Caimito is separated from the mainland by a narrow brackish channel and contains sand banks with xerophytic vegetation surrounded by marshy lagoons with Rhizospora mangle mangroves 8 Oryzomys gorgasi was caught in all habitats on the islet but has not been found in other similar sites in northwestern Venezuela where the introduced black rat is the only rodent collected Analysis of stomach contents of El Caimito specimens indicates that the species is an omnivore with a diet including crustaceans insects plant seeds and other plant material The crustaceans may include fiddler crabs Uca and a mangrove tree crab of the genus Aratus the insects include flies Diptera and the plants include grass seeds Two parasitic nematodes Litomosoides sigmodontis family Onchocercidae and an undetermined species of Pterygodermatites family Rictulariidae are known to infect O gorgasi 33 The 2009 IUCN Red List tersely indicates that the species has been found in a second Venezuelan locality 1 Conservation status EditOn the 2017 IUCN Red List O gorgasi is listed as endangered 1 and O curasoae as data deficient 11 The species may be threatened by competition with introduced black rats 34 and destruction of its habitat 35 but does occur in at least one protected area Displacement by the black rat has caused the species to become locally extinct in parts of its Venezuelan range 1 Suitable habitats for O gorgasi exist in inland Venezuela and further study is needed to determine whether it is present there 33 The extinction of the Curacao population may also have been caused by competition with the black rat which has been found together with Oryzomys in subfossil deposits 3 References Edit a b c d e Weksler and Timm 2018 a b McFarlane and Debrot 2001 p 182 a b c Voss and Weksler 2009 p 78 a b Musser and Carleton 2005 p 1148 a b Hershkovitz 1971 p 700 Hershkovitz 1971 p 707 Carleton and Arroyo Cabrales 2009 p 116 Sanchez et al 2001 p 206 a b c d Sanchez et al 2001 p 210 McFarlane and Debrot 2001 p 184 Weksler 2006 a b Lamoreux 2008 Weksler et al 2006 table 1 footnote e Voss and Weksler 2009 fig 1 Voss and Weksler 2009 p 73 Carleton and Arroyo Cabrales 2009 p 106 Carleton and Arroyo Cabrales 2009 p 117 Carleton and Arroyo Cabrales 2009 p 107 Weksler 2006 p 3 Musser and Carleton 2005 a b c d Sanchez et al 2001 p 208 a b Hershkovitz 1971 p 701 a b Hershkovitz 1971 p 702 Sanchez et al 2001 table 1 Sanchez et al 2001 p 207 Sanchez et al 2001 pp 208 209 Voss and Weksler 2009 p 75 Weksler 2006 p 40 Sanchez et al 2001 p 209 Sanchez et al 2001 p 209 Voss and Weksler 2009 pp 75 77 Voss and Weksler 2009 p 77 Voss and Weksler 2009 pp 74 78 Carleton and Arroyo Cabrales 2009 p 113 Sanchez et al 2001 p 210 Voss and Weksler 2009 p 74 a b c Sanchez et al 2001 p 211 Sanchez et al 2001 p 211 Weksler and Timm 2018 Sanchez et al 2001 p 205Literature cited EditCarleton M D Arroyo Cabrales J 2009 Review of the Oryzomys couesi Complex Rodentia Cricetidae Sigmodontinae in Western Mexico PDF Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 331 94 127 doi 10 1206 582 3 1 S2CID 42256389 Hershkovitz P 1971 A New Rice Rat of the Oryzomys palustris Group Cricetinae Muridae from Northwestern Colombia with Remarks on Distribution Journal of Mammalogy 52 4 700 709 doi 10 2307 1378917 JSTOR 1378917 McFarlane D A Debrot A O 2001 A new species of extinct oryzomyine rodent from the Quaternary of Curacao Netherlands Antilles Caribbean Journal of Science 37 3 4 182 184 Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Musser G G Carleton M D 2005 Superfamily Muroidea In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World a taxonomic and geographic reference 3rd ed Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press pp 894 1531 1148 1149 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 Sanchez H J Ochoa G J Voss R S 2001 Rediscovery of Oryzomys gorgasi Rodentia Muridae With Notes on Taxonomy and Natural History Mammalia 65 2 205 214 doi 10 1515 mamm 2001 65 2 205 S2CID 85316706 Voss R S Weksler M W 2009 On the taxonomic status of Oryzomys curasoae McFarlane and Debrot 2001 Rodentia Cricetidae Sigmodontinae with remarks on the phylogenetic relationships of O gorgasi Hershkovitz 1971 Caribbean Journal of Science 45 1 73 79 doi 10 18475 cjos v45i1 a11 S2CID 87520473 Weksler M 2006 Phylogenetic Relationships of Oryzomine sic Rodents Muroidea Sigmodontinae Separate and Combined Analyses of Morphological and Molecular Data Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 296 1 149 doi 10 1206 0003 0090 2006 296 0001 PROORM 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86057173 Weksler M Percequillo A R Voss R S 2006 Ten New Genera of Oryzomyine Rodents Cricetidae Sigmodontinae American Museum Novitates 3537 1 29 doi 10 1206 0003 0082 2006 3537 1 TNGOOR 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 84088556 Weksler M Timm R 2018 errata version of 2018 assessment Oryzomys gorgasi IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T115554360A22387922 en date doi mismatch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oryzomys gorgasi amp oldid 1107941703, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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