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Pucadelphys
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Pucadelphys

Pucadelphys
Temporal range: Early Paleocene (Tiupampan)
~66–61.7 Ma
Fossils from Bolivia
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Genus: Pucadelphys
Marshall & De Muizon, 1988
Species:
P. andinus
Binomial name
Pucadelphys andinus
Marshall & De Muizon, 1988

Pucadelphys is an extinct genus of non-marsupial metatherian.[1][2][3][4] The genus contains a single species, P. andinus. Fossils of Pucadelphys have been found in the Santa Lucía Formation in Tiupampa in Bolivia.[5]

Description

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Pucadelphys was small and likely to have eaten insects. It had a long tail, although incomplete on the best preserved fossils. It is possible that the tail was longer than (or at least as long as) its body. 17 vertebrae were preserved, and its estimated that there was 5 to 10 additional vertebrae originally. It is regarded as partially arboreal, and partially terrestrial. It may have been social, as more than 30 specimens have been found together.[6]

Taxonomy

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A 2016 phylogenetic analysis recovered Pucadelphys as a member of a metatherian clade including sparassodonts and other South American taxa, but not marsupials (which are instead closer to Cretaceous North American species). The phylogenetic tree from the analysis is shown below.[7]

Marsupialiformes

References

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Further reading

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