Overview

Distribution

Range Description

Endemic to eastern Brazil, where it is found from Bahia to São Paulo (Gardner, 2007).
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Geographic Range

Marmosops incanus is widely distributed along the east coast of Brazil, from about 10 to 25 degrees south latitude. (Emmons and Feer (1990); Mustrangi and Patton (1997).

Biogeographic Regions: neotropical (Native )

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Physical Description

Morphology

Physical Description

Marmosops incanus is dark brownish-gray dorsally with craemy-white underparts. The pelage is long (8 - 12 mm along the back) and very soft in young animals. Adults are the same color as young, but have a distinctive, short-haired pelage. These age-related pelage differences were thought to be winter (long pelage) and summer (short pelage) coats. A lateral band of gray-based hairs separates the dorsum from the venter. The eye rings are dark, prominent, and extend onto the snout. The dorsal side of the tail is fuscous, with the last 2 cm or so whitish. Males and females are markedly dimorphic, with males reaching much larger sizes. Adult males range in total body length approximately 270-430 mm and weigh 25-140 g females range in total body length approximately 240-360 mm and weigh 20-70 g. The tail is long, approximately 1.5 times the combined head and body length. The ears are large, averaging more than 25 mm in both sexes. The distinctive adult pelage is also dimorphic. In adult males the hairs of the throat and shoulder regions are replaced by short hairs (5 mm), much stiffer and coarser than in young animals. In females the entire dorsal pelage is replaced by short hairs, but these are soft as in the juveniles.

The dorsal pelage color varies geographically. Individuals from the semi-decidous and gallery forest in cerrado and caatinga habitats are markedly paler gray than those from the wet coastal habitats. Oliveira et al. (1992); Mustrangi and Patton (1997).

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Ecology

Habitat

Habitat and Ecology

Habitat and Ecology
Nocturnal; probably uses ground and low understory. This species has been trapped arborally and terrestrially, in both primary and secondary forests. It includes fruit and insects in its diet. Found in humid lowland Atlantic coastal forests, montane coastal forest to 800 m, and semi-deciduous forests of the cerrado and caatinga of the Brazilian Plateau. During an annual cycle there is a complete turnover in the male population. Since there is one breeding season per year, they conclude that the males exhibit a nearly semelparous breeding strategy (Eisenberg and Redford, 1999; Emmons and Feer, 1997). To 800 m elevation on coastal mountains and to 1,300 m on the Brazilian Plateau; possibly confined to forests of southeastern Brazil (Eisenberg and Redford, 1999; Emmons and Feer, 1997).

Systems
  • Terrestrial
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Habitat

Marmosops incanus inhabits the humid forest from sea level to 800 m along the coast as well on continental islands. It is also present in the drier, semi-deciduous forest, extending its distribution inland of the coastal mountains onto the Brazilian plateau where it is present at much higher elevations (up to1300 m). Marmosops incanus is also present in gallery forest in the cerrado and caatinga domains adjacent to the Atlantic forest (Mustrangi and Patton 1997).

Terrestrial Biomes: forest ; rainforest ; scrub forest

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Trophic Strategy

Food Habits

The gray slender mouse opossum appears highly insectivorous, feeding mostly on insects belonging to the orders Coleoptera and Orthoptera (de Fonseca and Kierulff, 1989).

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Life History and Behavior

Reproduction

Reproduction

This species has an interesting life cycle. Breeding occurs during three months (Sept.-Dec.), following which all adult males evidently die, so that none exists in the following seven months (Feb.-Aug.). Adult females survive through May, and then die, so that none are present from June to August when the population includes only young of the year. Males thus have a lifespan of about a year, and females of a year and a half. At birth, the young are exceptionally altricial. There may be geographic variation in the months when breeding occurs, usually during the rainy season. The limited breeding season shown by M. incanus indicates that the female are monoestric and that the estrous cycle is short. Each individual participates in only one reproductive season during its lifetime. However, at least two reproductive periods in the year are found in one population, a major one from Oct. to Dec. and a second, in which fewer animals participate, ocurring from March to May. Tribe (1990); Emmons and Feer (1990); Lorini et al. (1994).

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Molecular Biology and Genetics

Molecular Biology

Statistics of barcoding coverage: Marmosops incanus

Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLDS) Stats
Public Records: 0
Species: 7
Species With Barcodes: 1

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Conservation

Conservation Status

IUCN Red List Assessment


Red List Category
LC
Least Concern

Red List Criteria

Version
3.1

Year Assessed
2008

Assessor/s
Brito, D., Astua de Moraes, D., Lew, D., Soriano, P. & Emmons, L.

Reviewer/s
Amori, G. (Small Nonvolant Mammal Red List Authority) & Schipper, J. (Global Mammal Assessment Team)

Contributor/s

Justification
This species is listed as Least Concern in because of its wide distribution, presumed large population, tolerance of some degree of habitat modification, occurrence in a number of protected areas and because it is unlikely to be declining at nearly the rate required to qualify for listing in a threatened category.

History
  • 1996
    Lower Risk/near threatened
    (Baillie and Groombridge 1996)
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Conservation Status

---

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: least concern

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Population

Population
A common species.

Population Trend
Unknown
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Threats

Threats

Major Threats
No major threats to this species.
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Management

Conservation Actions

Conservation Actions
The species occurs in a number of protected areas.
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Wikipedia

Gray slender opossum

The Gray Slender Opossum, Marmosops incanus, is an opossum species from South America. It is found in Brazil.

References

  1. ^ Gardner, Alfred (16 November 2005). Wilson, Don E., and Reeder, DeeAnn M., eds. ed. Mammal Species of the World (3rd ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2 vols. (2142 pp.). pp. 11. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494. http://www.bucknell.edu/msw3. 
  2. ^ Brito, D., Astua de Moraes, D., Lew, D., Soriano, P. & Emmons, L. (2008). Marmosops incanus. In: IUCN 2008. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 28 December 2008. Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern


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