Dasypus beniensis Lönnberg, 1942

Feijó, Anderson & Cordeiro-Estrela, Pedro, 2016, Taxonomic revision of the Dasypus kappleri complex, with revalidations of Dasypus pastasae (Thomas, 1901) and Dasypus beniensis Lönnberg, 1942 (Cingulata, Dasypodidae), Zootaxa 4170 (2), pp. 271-297 : 286-288

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4170.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9E3AE604-3656-4B0A-B09A-C970200BF5F6

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F2AA4F-9740-9A09-99AE-FA2CFB3560D8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dasypus beniensis Lönnberg, 1942
status

 

Dasypus beniensis Lönnberg, 1942

Dasypus kappleri beniensis Lönnberg, 1942:49 (original description)

Holotype. Lönnberg (1942) mentioned a female adult specimen collected on 25 October 1937 by A.M. Olalla, but no collection number was cited. According to Wetzel & Mondolfi (1979:56), the holotype is number NHR 46 View Materials (Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm), nowadays recorded as NRM 583386 View Materials ( Figure 11 View FIGURE 11 ).

Type locality. “[N]ear the confluence of Rio Madre de Dios with Rio Beni, Victoria, Bolivia ” ( Lönnberg, 1942:49). Anderson (1997:118) stated that the type locality is “ 3 km from the left bank of río Beni and about 9 km from confluence with río Madre de Dios ”.

Etymology. The name beniensis refers to the type locality.

Diagnosis. Externally, D. beniensis resembles D. pastasae with rough scales on the pelvic shield and flattened scales in the proximal rings of the tail. Cranially, it possesses four unique character states: a much less prominent lateral palatine crest, a convex posterior margin of the palatine, a well-developed and smoothly curved lacrimal bone, and a pentagonal and weakly developed tentorial process of the parietals.

Distribution. Dasypus beniensis is known from the right bank of the lower Amazon and Madeira rivers in Brazil and the right bank of Madre de Dios River in Bolivia ( Figure 12 View FIGURE 12 ). These three major rivers appear to represent geographic barriers for this species to the north, the south barrier seems to be dry forests and savannas in Bolivia (Chaco) and Brazil (Caatinga and Cerrado) ( Pennington et al. 2000).

Measures. Dasypus beniensis is the largest of the three species in the Dasypus kappleri complex, with mean values that exceed those of D. kappleri and D. pastasae in 16 of the 24 cranial measures ( Table 4 View TABLE 4 ).

Specimens examined (locality numbers as in Figure 12 View FIGURE 12 ). BOLIVIA: 1 (MNK sn). BRAZIL: 8 (MN 42853, MN 42854), 9 ( MZUSP 8950 View Materials ), 15 ( MPEG 12331 View Materials ), 16 ( UFMT 25 View Materials ), 17 ( MPEG 4676 View Materials , MPEG 4678 View Materials ), 18 ( MZUSP 19973 View Materials , MZUSP 19974 View Materials ), 19 ( MPEG 8481 View Materials ), 49 ( UFMT 302 View Materials ); and photos of the holotype (NRM 583386).

NHR

NHR

NRM

NRM

NHR

Institute of Scientific and Technological Research (IRST)

NRM

Swedish Museum of Natural History - Zoological Collections

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Cingulata

Family

Dasypodidae

Genus

Dasypus

Loc

Dasypus beniensis Lönnberg, 1942

Feijó, Anderson & Cordeiro-Estrela, Pedro 2016
2016
Loc

Dasypus kappleri beniensis Lönnberg, 1942 :49

Lonnberg 1942: 49
1942
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