2015-04-12

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The hutia (Capromys pilorides) is nearly as large, arboreal in habits,

and a native of Cuba, where it is the largest indigenous mammal.

Other species occur in Cuba, Jamaica and the Bahamas, while a

Venezuelan species, Procapromys geayi, represents a separate genus.

In one kind the tail is prehensile. All these rodents are remarkable

for the manner in which the liver is divided into minute lobules.

Plagiodontia aedium, another member of the group, is peculiar to

Hayti. The African cane-rats, T hryonomys (or Aulacodus), are

large terrestrial rodents, ranging from the centre of the continent

to the Cape, easily recognized by their deeply Huted incisors (see

COY PU). The Octodontidae, which are exclusively South American,

differ from the preceding family by the tympanic bulla being

filled with cellular bony tissue, and by the par-occipital process

curving beneath it, while the cheek-teeth are almost or completely

rootless and composed of parallel plates. The first front

toe may be absent. The more typical members of the family are

rat-like burrowing rodents, living in communities. The typical

genus is represented by the degu (Octodon degus) and several

nearly related species; other genera being Ctenomys, Octodontomys

(Neoctodon), Aconaemys, Spalacopus and Abracoma; the latter

taking its name from its unusually soft fur. Among these, the

tuco-tucos (Ctenomys) are characterized by their burrowing habits,

almost rudimentary ears, small eyes, short tails and the kidney shaped

grinding-surfaces of their cheek-teeth. They take their

name of tuco-tuco 'from their cry, which resembles the blows

of a hammer on an anvil, and may be heard all day as the little

rodents move in their burrows, generally formed in sandy soil.

In some districts the ground is undermined by these burrows, in

which stores of food are accumulated. The species of Octodon

have larger ears, longer, tufted tails and the sides of the cheek teeth

indented by plates of enamel; they are chiefly found in

hedgerows and bushes, where they burrow. In Abrocoma the tail has

no tuft, the ears are still larger and the lower cheek-teeth more

complex than the upper ones. Aconaemys is an allied Chilean genus

in which the enamel-folds meet across the molars. Several of

these rodents live in the Andes, where the ground is covered for

months with snow. The second group of the family is formed by

the genera Loncheres, Dactylomys, Echilnolmys, Proechimys and

a few others, the members of which are rat-like rodents, with long

scaly or furry tails, and frequently flattened spines mingled with the

fur of the back. Most species are brown above and whitish beneath,

but in some the lighter tints extend on to the sides, shoulders and

head, communicating a coloration somewhat like that of a guinea-pig

(see OCTODON). The North African gundis (Ctenodactylus gundi

and Ct. vali) are the types of an African family, which also includes

the genera Massoutiera, Peclinator and Petromys. In the gundi

the two inner toes of the hind-foot are furnished with a horny comb

and bristles for the purpose of cleaning the fur, and the tail is very

short; but in Pectinator the tail is longer. Petromys has a still longer

and more bushy tail, and no comb to the hind-feet. The gundi is a

diurnal species, inhabiting rocky districts, and having habits very

similar to those of a jerboa. Of these Ctenodactylus and Pectinator

are characterized by the union of the incus and malleus of the

internal ear, the free fibula and the almost rootless cheek-teeth.

The premolar is very small, thus showing an approximation to

the Myoidea, although in other respects Petromys appears to approximate

to the Hystricidae.

Picas and Hares.~The remaining rodents, which include two

families—the picas (Ochotonidae) and the hares and rabbits

(Leporidae)-constitute a second sub-order, the Duplicidentata,

differing from all the foregoing groups in possessing two pairs of

incisors in the upper jaw (of which the second is small, and placed

directly behind the large first pair), the enamel of which extends

round to their posterior surfaces. At birth there are three pairs of

incisors, but the outer one is soon lost. The incisive foramina are

large and usually confluent; the bony palate is very narrow from

before backwards; there is no alisphenoid canal; the fibula is

welded to the tibia, and articulates with the calcaneum; and

the testes are permanently external. All are terrestrial, and in

many cases burrowing, in their habits, and some of them are of

extreme fleetness. The Ochotonidae are represented at the present

day only by the single genus Ochotona (Lagomys), which includes

all the picas, or mouse-hares. They are small rodents with complete

clavicles, fore- and hind-limbs of nearly equal length, no

external tails and short ears. Skull depressed, frontals contracted

and without post-orbital processes; {>. } or § ; molars rootless,

with transverse enamel-folds. In some cases the molar-formula

is § . The genus includes about a score of species of guinea-pig-like

animals, inhabiting chiefly the mountainous parts of Northern

Asia (from 11,000 to 14,000 ft.), one species only being known

from South-east Europe and several from the Rocky Mountains

and Alaska.

From the picas the hares and rabbits (Leporidae) are distinguished

by the imperfect clavicles, the more or less elongated hind-limbs,

short recurved tail (absent in one case) and generally long ears.

The skull is compressed, with large wing-shaped post-orbital

processes (fig. 16); p. 3. With the exception of Australasia, the

amily has a cosmopolitan distribution; and its numerous species

resemble one another more or less closely in general external

characters. In all the fore-limbs have five and the hind four

digits; and the soles of the feet are densely clothed with hairs

similar to those 4covering

the

leg? the inner

sur ace of the,

cheeks being

hairy. Although

the famlly has

such a wide dis-

tribution the

of the species jig

are restricted to,

Europe, north- My,

ern and cen-;

§ al Agia and a

orth merica°, ,

Eouth Amifici gl/M c,

aving very ew.

Till within the

last few years the

malority of

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Flo. 16.-Skull of the Common Hare (Lepus

lowed the rac europaeus).

practice of including

all the members of the family in the genus Lepus. It is

true that Mr E. Blyth long ago proposed the name Caprolagus

for the remarkable spiny rabbit of the western Himalayas,

while the generic name Oryctolagus was suggested later for the

rabbit, and Sylvilagus for the American “ c0tton-tails "; but

none of these was accorded general acceptation. Of late years,

however, zoologists have come to the conclusion that generic subdivisions

of the Leporidae are advisable. In 1899 Dr Forsyth

Major proposed a classification of the family in which a number

of species were grouped with the spiny rabbit in the genus Caprolagus,

whilst Oryctolagus was taken to include not only the common

rabbit, but likewise the Cape hare. A more recent classification

is that of Mr M. W. Lyon, in which by far the largest number of

species of the family are retained in the original genus Lepus, which

has also the widest geographical distribution of all the genera. It

is typified by the blue hare (Lepus timidus), next to which comes

the common hare (L. europaieus) and certain other allied forms.

The jackass-hares of Mexico, &c., such as L. calzfornicus, form a

second sub-group; while these are in turn followed by the American

hare (L. americanus) and its immediate relatives. The cottontails,

or wood-rabbits, of North and South America are regarded as

forming a genus, Sylvilagus, by themselves, which includes the

Brazilian and Paraguay hares, and appears to be chiefly distinguished

by a certain feature in the parietal region of the skull.

Under the name of Oryctolagus cuniculus, the rabbit is considered

to represent a genus by itself, specially characterized by the shortness

of the ears and hind-feet. The swamp-rabbit (L. palustris)

and water-hare (L. aquatic us) of the southern United States form

the group Limnotragus, characterized by the harsher fur, the shorter

ears, tail and hind-feet, and the complete fusion of the post-orbital

process (which is so distinct in the typical hares) with the adjacent

parts of the skull, so that neither notches nor perforations are

developed in this region. The short-tailed rabbit of the western

United States (Brachylagus idahoensis) is the sole member of a

group allied in general characters to the typical Lepus, but distinguished

by the unusually short tail. Another group is Pronulagus,

typified by the Cape thick-tailed hare, the so-called Lepus

crassicaudatus, which is externally similar to Lepus proper, but has

the skull and teeth of the general type of the next group. The tailless

rabbit of Mount Popocatepetl, Mexico, originally described as

a distinct generic type, under the name of Romerolagus nelsoni,

is broadly distinguished by the entire absence of the tail, and the

short ears and hind-feet, its general form being like that of the

Liu-Kiu rabbit, while, as in the latter, the post-orbital process of

the skull is small, and represented only by the hinder half. Next

come three remarkable rabbits from the Indo-Malay countries,

all closely allied, although regarded as representing three generic

groups, Nesolagus, Cafrolagus and Pentalagus. In all three the

skull is of the type 0 Romerolagus. The first is represented by

the Sumatran rabbit, the so-called N. netscherfi, which apparently

differs from the spiny rabbit mainly by the pattern of the cheek teeth.

The spiny rabbit, separated from Lepus by Blyth in 1845

under the name of Caprolagus hispidus, is an inhabitant of Assam

and the adjacent districts, and distinguished by its harsh, bristly

fur and short ears and tail. In the Liu-Kiu rabbit (Pentalagus

furnessi) the coat is equally harsh, but the ears and hind-feet are

shorter, and there are only five (in place of the usual six) pairs of

upper cheek-teeth. In the loss of the last upper molar, the Liu-Kiu

rabbit approximates to the picas, as does the tailless rabbit in the

abortion of its caudal appendage. Mr Lyon's scheme seems to

be the best attempt to explain the affinities of the members of the

group. Whether all his genera be adopted, or all the species be

included 1n-Lepus, must largely be a matter of individual opinion.<noinclude>{{smallrefs}}</div></noinclude>

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