Giant hutia

From Freepedia

Giant Hutias
Conservation status: Extinct (1000 BC)
Fossil Range: Pleistocene
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Rodentia
Suborder:Hystricognathi
Family:Heptaxodontidae
Anthony, 1917
Genera

Amblyrhiza
Clidomys
Elasmodontomys
Quemsia

The giant hutias are an extinct group of large rodents known from fossil and subfossil material in the West Indies. One species is estimated to have weighed 150 kg and been as large as an American Black Bear. This is larger than Capybara, the largest rodent living today, but still much smaller than Phoberomys pattersoni, the largest rodent to have ever lived. These animals may have persisted into historic times and were probably used as a food source by aboriginal humans. All giant hutias are in a single family Heptaxodontidae, which contains no living species.

Taxonomy

The giant hutias are divided into two subfamilies, four genera, and five species.

References

  • Nowak, Ronald M. 1999. Walker's Mammals of the World, 6th edition. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1936 pp. ISBN 0-801-85789-9
  • Woods, C. A. 1989. Biogeography of West Indian rodents. Pp 741-797 in Biogeography of the West Indies: Past Present and Future. Sandhil Crane Press, Gainesville.


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