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Plagiodontia aedium F. Cuvier, 1836

Cuvier's hutia, Hispaniolan hutia, Hispanolan hutia, Dominican hutia (as P. hylaeum)

 

 

Taxonomy & Nomenclature

Synonym/s: Plagiodontia hylaeum Miller, 1927

 

Conservation Status

Last record: 1836

Rediscovered in 1948 (Johnson, 1948)

IUCN RedList status: Endangered

 

Distribution

Hispaniola

 

Biology & Ecology

 

 

Hypodigm

 

 

Media

 

 

References

Anderson, S. (1965). Conspecificity of Plagiodontia aedium and P. hylaeum (Rodentia). Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington 78: 95-98.

Anonymous. (1964). A preliminary list of rare mammals including those believed to be rare but concerning which detailed information is still lacking. IUCN Bulletin 11(Special Supplement): 4 pp.

Anonymous. (1978). Haitian desert. Oryx 14(3): 209.

Borroto-Páez, Rafael, Woods, C. A. and Kilpatrick C. W. (2005). Sistematica de las Iutías de las Antill as (Rodentia, Capromyídae). In: Alcover, J. A. and Bover, P. (eds.). Proceedings of the International Symposium "Insular Vertebrate Evolution: the Palaeontological Approach': Monografies de la Societat d'Història Natural de les Balears, 12: 33-50.

Brace, S. et al. (2012). Population history of the Hispaniolan hutia Plagiodontia aedium (Rodentia: Capromyidae): testing the model of ancient differentiation on a geotectonically complex Caribbean island. Mol Ecol. 21(9): 2239-2253. [Abstract]

Cooke, Siobhán B. and Crowley, Brooke E. (2018). Deciphering the isotopic niches of now-extinct Hispaniolan rodents. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 38(5): e1510414. https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2018.1510414

Cooke, Siobhán B., Dávalos, Liliana M., Mychajliw, Alexis M. Turvey, Samuel T. and Upham, Nathan S. (2017). Anthropogenic Extinction Dominates Holocene Declines of West Indian Mammals. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 48: 301-327. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110316-022754

Fabre, P.-H., Upham, N. S., Emmons, L. H., Justy, F., Leite, Y. L. R., Loss, A. C., Orlando, L., Tilak, M.-K., Patterson, B. D. and Douzery, E. J. P. (2017). Mitogenomic Phylogeny, Diversification, and Biogeography of South American Spiny Rats. Molecular Biology and Evolution 34(3): 613-633. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msw261

Fisher, Diana O. (2011). Trajectories from extinction: where are missing mammals rediscovered? Global Ecology & Biogeography 20: 415-425. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1466-8238.2010.00624.x [Appendix S1]

Hansford, James, Nuñez-Miño, J. M., Young, R. P., Brace, S., Brocca, J. L. and Turvey, Samuel T. (2012). Taxonomy-testing and the ‘Goldilocks Hypothesis’: morphometric analysis of species diversity in living and extinct Hispaniolan hutias. Systematics and Biodiversity 10(4): 491-507.

Hayman, R. W. (1956). Mammals of the West Indies. Zoo Life 11(2): 41-45.

Johnson, D. H. (1948). A rediscovered Haitian rodent, Plagiodontia aedium, with a synopsis of related species. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 61: 69-76.

Joslin, Paul and Maryanka, Daphne. (1968). Endangered Mammals of the World: Report on Status and Action Treatment. IUCN Publications, New Series, Supplementary Paper No. 13: 34 pp.

Olney, P. J. S. (ed.). (1980). International Zoo Yearbook 20. Zool. Soc. London.

Salazar, L. (1977). Notas Generales Sobre Plagiodontia sp. con comentarios sobre los especimenes obtenidos por ZooDom. ZooDom. 2: 16-23.

Scheffers, Brett R., Yong, Ding Li, Harris, J. Berton C., Giam, Xingli and Sodhi, Navjot S. (2011). The world’s rediscovered species: back from the brink? PLoS ONE 6(7): e22531. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022531 [Supporting Information (Table S1)]

Scott, Peter (ed.). (1965). Preliminary List of Rare Mammals and Birds, pp. 155-237. In: The Launching of a New Ark. First Report of the President and Trustees of the World Wildlife Fund. An International Foundation for saving the world's wildlife and wild places 1961-1964. London: Collins.

Shev, Gene T. and Laffoon, Jason E. (2022). Paleodietary reconstruction of endemic rodents from the precolumbian Dominican Republic: Discriminating wild feeding behavior from diets linked to human niche construction activities. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. https://doi.org/10.1002/oa.3149

Thornback, Jane and Jenkins, Martin (compilers). (1982). The IUCN Mammal Red Data Book. Part 1: Threatened Mammalian Taxa of the Americas and the Australasian Zoogeographic Region (Excluding Cetacea). Gland, Switzerland: IUCN. 516 pp.

Turvey S. T., Fernández-Secades C., Nuñez-Miño J. M., Hart T., Martinez P., Brocca J. L., and Young R. P. (2014). Is local ecological knowledge a useful conservation tool for small mammals in a Caribbean multicultural landscape? Biological Conservation 169: 189-197.

Turvey, S. and Incháustegui, S. (2008). Plagiodontia aedium. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2015.1. (http://www.iucnredlist.org). Downloaded on 07 June 2015.

Varona, L. S. 1974. Catálogo de los mamíferos vivientes y extinguidos de las Antillas. Instituto de Zoologia, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba (Havana), 139 pp.

Woods, C. A. (1977). The Natural History of the Haitian Hutia. Unpublished report. 15 pp.

Woods, C. A. (1989). The biogeography of West Indian rodents, pp. 741-798. In: Woods, C. A. (ed.). Biogeography of the West Indies: Past, Present, and Future. Gainesville, Florida: Sandhill Crane Press.

Woods, C. A. and Howland, E. B. (1979). Adaptive Radiation of Capromyid Rodents. J. Mammal. 60: 95-116.

Woods, C. A. and Rosen, R. C. (1977). Report on conservation work in southern Haiti. Unpublished report. 32 pp.

 

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