List of rodents of the Caribbean
The Caribbean region is home to a diverse and largely endemic rodent fauna. This includes the endemic family Capromyidae, which are largely limited to the Greater Antilles, and two other groups of endemic hystricognaths, the heteropsomyines and giant hutias, including the extinct bear-sized Amblyrhiza inundata. Lesser Antillean rodent faunas mostly consist of oryzomyines, members of a distantly related group of rodents, and include two of the largest known oryzomyines, Megalomys desmarestii and "Oryzomys hypenemus". Various other rodents are limited to land-bridge islands such as Trinidad, which were connected to the mainland during glacial-period lowered sea levels in the Pleistocene, or to smaller portions of the Caribbean archipelago. Much of the native rodent fauna of the Caribbean are extinct because of human influences, particularly following the introduction of invasive species such as Old World rats.
For the purposes of this article, the "Caribbean" includes all islands in the Caribbean Sea and the Bahamas, Turks and Caicos Islands, and [|Barbados], which are not in the Caribbean Sea but biogeographically belong to the same Caribbean bioregion.
Overview
The Caribbean rodent fauna is dominated by oryzomyines, members of the family Cricetidae, and by three groups of hystricognaths: hutias, giant hutias, and heteropsomyines, which are part of the spiny rat family. Many other rodent groups are known from the Caribbean, but these are either introduced or limited to islands outside the limits of the West Indian faunal region as defined by Koopman.So far, no rodents have been recorded from Navassa Island, the Turks and Caicos Islands, the British Virgin Islands, Saint Barthélemy, Redonda, Saba, the federal dependencies of Venezuela, or the Insular Region of Colombia.
Oryzomyines are a diverse group, consisting over a hundred species found from the eastern United States south to Tierra del Fuego, including also the Galápagos Islands. In the Caribbean, they are found on many islands close to the mainland, from the [|Florida Keys] to Tobago, but also on Jamaica and throughout the Lesser Antilles north to [|Anguilla]. Their invasion of the Lesser Antilles must have been relatively recent, as sigmodontine rodents only reached South America from North America about 5 million years ago. In the Lesser Antilles, most species have not been named or described, and the true diversity of the group in that region remains unclear. All endemic Caribbean oryzomyines are now extinct, though several island populations of mainland species survive.
Hutias are the most diverse endemic Caribbean hystricognath group and the only one that still survives, although many species are extinct. Most species are known from [|Cuba] and [|Hispaniola], but hutias are also indigenous to Jamaica and some smaller islands and they have been introduced to several other parts of the Caribbean. The hutia family is divided into four subfamilies, of which one or two are now extinct. They have been present in the Caribbean for a considerable span of time, as documented by the find of a hutia, Zazamys, in early Miocene sediments on Cuba. This represents more than half the age of the earliest known hystricognath rodent in South America.
Giant hutias are a heterogeneous group of hystricognaths that include not only truly giant forms like Amblyrhiza, but also the small Xaymaca. All are now extinct. Some have previously been included in a family Heptaxodontidae, but there is little evidence that the group is truly natural. Giant hutias are known from Jamaica, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and Anguilla and [|Saint Martin] in the northern Lesser Antilles.
Heteropsomyines form a distinct subfamily of the widespread Neotropic family of spiny rats, which is known only from Cuba, Hispaniola, and Puerto Rico. On each island, a distinct genus with two species has been found, but all are now extinct. A fourth genus, Puertoricomys, is known from an older, perhaps Pliocene, deposit on Puerto Rico. These animals exhibited characters intermediate between hutias and spiny rats and have sometimes been treated as a subfamily of the Capromyidae.
Among introduced rodents, the house mouse, brown rat, and black rat are most common; these three species, originally from the Old World, have been introduced to all parts of the world and occur throughout the Caribbean. They are not mentioned specifically in the faunal lists in this article.
Agoutis, members of a mainland American hystricognath genus that is also indigenous to some Caribbean islands, have also been widely introduced, resulting, among others, in the presence of the red-rumped agouti on most of the Lesser Antilles. Several other hystricognaths have also been introduced in parts of the Caribbean.
The genera of Caribbean rodents are classified as follows:
- Order Rodentia
- *Suborder Hystricomorpha
- **Infraorder Hystricognathi
- ***Family Capromyidae
- ****Subfamily Capromyinae: Capromys, Geocapromys, Mesocapromys, Mysateles
- ****Subfamily Hexolobodontinae: Hexolobodon
- ****Subfamily Isolobodontinae: Isolobodon, Zazamys
- ****Subfamily Plagiodontiinae: Plagiodontia, Rhizoplagiodontia
- ***Giant hutias
- ****Subfamily Clidomyinae: Clidomys
- ****Subfamily Heptaxodontinae: Amblyrhiza, Elasmodontomys
- ****Not assigned to subfamily: Quemisia, Tainotherium, Xaymaca
- ***Family Echimyidae
- ****Subfamily Heteropsomyinae: Boromys, Brotomys, Heteropsomys, Puertoricomys
- ****Subfamily Echimyinae: Makalata, Pattonomys, Proechimys
- ****Subfamily Eumysopinae: Proechimys
- ***Family Dasyproctidae: Dasyprocta
- ***Family Cuniculidae : Cuniculus
- ***Family Caviidae
- ****Subfamily Caviinae : Cavia
- ****Subfamily Hydrochoerinae : Hydrochoerus
- ***Family Erethizontidae : Coendou
- *Suborder Sciuromorpha
- **Family Sciuridae
- ***Subfamily Sciurinae: Sciurus
- *Suborder Castorimorpha
- **Superfamily Geomyioidea
- ***Family Geomyidae : Orthogeomys
- ***Family Heteromyidae : Heteromys
- *Suborder Myomorpha
- **Superfamily Muroidea
- ***Family Muridae
- ****Subfamily Murinae : Mus, Rattus
- ***Family Nesomyidae
- ****Subfamily Cricetomyinae: Cricetomys
- ***Family Cricetidae
- ****Subfamily Neotominae
- *****Tribe Neotomini: Neotoma
- *****Tribe Reithrodontomyini: Peromyscus, Reithrodontomys
- ****Subfamily Sigmodontinae
- *****Tribe Akodontini : Necromys
- *****Tribe Oryzomyini : Agathaeromys, Dushimys, Hylaeamys, Megalomys, Nectomys, Oecomys, Oligoryzomys, Oryzomys, Pennatomys, Zygodontomys, various unidentified genera
- *****Tribe Phyllotini : Calomys
- *****Tribe Sigmodontini : Sigmodon
- *****Tribe Thomasomyini : Rhipidomys
Greater Antilles
Cuba
, the largest of the Antilles, and its surrounding islands, of which the Isla de la Juventud is the most significant, harbor a diverse hutia fauna, including many species with very limited distributions. Various other hutias and an endemic genus of heteropsomyine became extinct during the Quaternary and the oldest known hutia, Zazamys, has been found in Miocene Cuban deposits.- † Boromys - Cuban cave rats
- * † Boromys offella - Oriente cave rat, an extinct spiny rat known from both the main island and the Isla de la Juventud.
- * † Boromys torrei - Torre's cave rat, another extinct spiny rat from both Cuba and the Isla de la Juventud.
- Capromys
- * † Capromys acevado, an extinct hutia, sometimes placed in a separate genus Macrocapromys.
- * † Capromys antiquus, an extinct hutia.
- * † Capromys arrendondoi, an extinct hutia.
- * Capromys gundlachianus - Archipiélago de Sabana hutia, a species related to the widespread C. pilorides that is limited to parts of the Sabana-Camagüey Archipelago off northern Cuba.
- * † Capromys latus, an extinct hutia.
- * † Capromys pappus, an extinct hutia known from Isla de la Juventud.
- * Capromys pilorides - Desmarest's hutia or Cuban hutia, the most common and largest extent hutia, widespread on Cuba and many nearby islands, including Isla de la Juventud. The previously recognized Geocapromys megas is a synonym of this species.
- * † Capromys robustus, an extinct hutia.
- Cuniculus - Paca
- * Cuniculus paca - Lowland paca, a large hystricognath indigenous to Central and South America, including [|Trinidad and Tobago] and introduced to Cuba.
- Dasyprocta - Agouti
- * Dasyprocta mexicana - Mexican agouti, an agouti from Mexico that has been introduced to Cuba.
- * Dasyprocta punctata - Central American agouti, a Central and South American agouti introduced to both the Cayman Islands and Cuba.
- Geocapromys
- * Geocapromys brownii - Jamaican hutia, a hutia indigenous to Jamaica. It was found in an Amerindian archeological site, probably indicating transport by humans.
- * † Geocapromys columbianus - Cuban coney, an extinct hutia related to extant Bahaman and Jamaican Geocapromys that persisted until after the first European contact. It was found on both Cuba and Isla de la Juventud.
- * † Geocapromys pleistocenicus, an extinct species of Cuba known from Cuba and Isla de la Juventud.
- Mesocapromys
- * Mesocapromys angelcabrerai - Cabrera's hutia, a small hutia from Cayos de Ana Maria, Ciego de Ávila Province, and possibly the nearby mainland.
- * Mesocapromys auritus - Large-eared hutia, a hutia from Cayo Fragoso in the Sabana-Camagüey Archipelago.
- * † Mesocapromys barbouri, an extinct hutia.
- * † Mesocapromys beatrizae, an extinct hutia.
- * † Mesocapromys delicatus, an extinct hutia.
- * † Mesocapromys gracilis, an extinct hutia.
- * † Mesocapromys kraglievichi, an extinct hutia.
- * Mesocapromys melanurus - Black-tailed hutia, a hutia from eastern mainland Cuba which was formerly placed in Mysateles.
- * † Mesocapromys minimus, an extinct hutia.
- * Mesocapromys nanus - Dwarf hutia, a small hutia from the Zapata Swamp in Matanzas Province on mainland Cuba.
- * Mesocapromys sanfelipensis - San Felipe hutia, a hutia from Cayo Juan Garcia in Pinar del Río Province.
- * † Mesocapromys silvai, an extinct hutia.
- Mysateles
- * † Mysateles jaumei, an extinct hutia.
- * Mysateles garridoi, - Garrido's hutia, a hutia known only from a small island close to Cayo Largo del Sur in the Canarreos Archipelago off southwestern Cuba.
- * Mysateles meridionalis - Isla De La Juventud tree hutia, a hutia from the southwestern part of the Isla de la Juventud.
- * Mysateles prehensilis - Prehensile-tailed hutia, a hutia from western mainland Cuba.
- † Zazamys
- * † Zazamys veronicae, the earliest known hutia. It is known from a few teeth found at the early Miocene locality of Domo de Zaza in a fauna that also includes the monkey Paralouatta marianae and the sloth Imagocnus zazae''. Unlike all later Cuban hutias, it belongs to the subfamily Isolobodontinae.
Jamaica
- Clidomys osborni, an extinct giant hutia from Jamaica. Numerous morphological variants have been described under separate names, but these are now all recognized as synonyms.
- Geocapromys brownii, a hutia known only from the island.
- A femur of a large rodent, somewhat similar to that of Amblyrhiza, provides evidence for the possible occurrence of a large hystricognath, perhaps a heptaxodontine, on Jamaica.
- Oryzomys antillarum, a medium-sized oryzomyine closely related to extant Central American Oryzomys which probably became extinct around 1880. Its taxonomic status as either a subspecies of the mainland species Oryzomys couesi or Oryzomys palustris or as a separate species has been disputed, but it is now recognized as a separate species. It is also found in late Pleistocene deposits.
- Xaymaca fulvopulvis, a small hystricognath that may be most closely related to the giant hutias of Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Leeward Islands.
Hispaniola
- Brotomys contractus, an extinct spiny rat from mainland Hispaniola.
- Brotomys voratus, a spiny rat from both mainland Hispaniola and Gonâve. Like B. contractus, it is now extinct, but it survived into the mid-20th century.
- Capromys pilorides, the common hutia of Cuba. It has been recorded from an archeological site on the islet of San Gabriel in Samana Bay, Dominican Republic, where it was most likely introduced by Amerindians.
- Hexolobodon phenax, a hutia classified in its own subfamily that is now extinct. It occurred on both Hispaniola itself and Gonâve and includes H. poolei as a junior synonym.
- Isolobodon montanus, a hutia known from both Hispaniola and Gonâve that is now also extinct. It was formerly placed in its own genus, Aphaetreus.
- Isolobodon portoricensis, a hutia known from both mainland Hispaniola and several offshore islands. It was introduced to Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, but may now be extinct; it could still survive in remote areas of Hispaniola or on the nearby island of Tortuga.
- Plagiodontia aedium, a hutia known from Hispaniola and Gonâve. It includes P. hylaeum, formerly a separate species, as a subspecies.
- Plagiodontia araeum, a large extinct hutia from mainland Hispaniola. Hyperplagiodontia stenocoronalis, described in a separate genus, is the same species.
- Plagiodontia ipnaeum, another large mainland [|Hispaniolan] hutia that is now extinct.
- Quemisia gravis, an extinct giant hutia known only from the main island.
- Rhizoplagiodontia lemkei, an extinct hutia related to Plagiodontia, but classified in its own genus, that occurred in the Massif de la Hotte of southwestern Haiti.
Puerto Rico
- Elasmodontomys obliquus, a giant hutia native to the island that is now extinct.
- Heteropsomys antillensis, an extinct spiny rat from Puerto Rico only.
- Heteropsomys insulans, an extinct spiny rat known only from cave deposits on Puerto Rico.
- Isolobodon portoricensis, a hutia native to Hispaniola and introduced to Puerto Rico and nearby Mona Island that was first described from Puerto Rico. It may now be extinct.
- Puertoricomys corozalus, a spiny rat known from a single mandible from a possibly Pliocene deposit on Puerto Rico. It is notably more primitive than other heteropsomyines.
- Tainotherium valei, a giant hutia known from a single femur from a Quaternary deposit. Its systematic position is unclear.
Leeward Islands
U.S. Virgin Islands
The United States Virgin Islands are a group of islands east of Puerto Rico, centered around the three main islands of Saint Thomas, Saint John and Saint Croix. No native rodents are known, but several species have been introduced.- Dasyprocta leporina, a South American agouti introduced over much of the Lesser Antilles. The Virgin Islands population derives from a Brazilian form of D. leporina.
- Isolobodon portoricensis, a Hispaniolan hutia introduced on Saint Thomas and Saint Croix by Amerindians, but now extinct there.
Anguilla
- Amblyrhiza inundata, an extremely large giant hutia also known from nearby Saint Martin. It is known from Quaternary fossils but may not have survived until its first contact with humans.
- Both Mus musculus and Rattus have been recorded from archeological sites.
- An oryzomyine, similar in size to "Undescribed species A" from [|Montserrat], has been recorded from several Amerindian archeological sites on Anguilla.
Saint Martin
- Amblyrhiza inundata, a giant hutia also known from Anguilla.
- An oryzomyine has been recorded at an Amerindian site at Hope Estate on the French side of the island which dates from about 500 BCE.
Sint Eustatius
- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced agouti. It has been recorded only from an archeological site.
- Pennatomys nivalis, an extinct oryzomyine, is known from archeological sites.
Saint Kitts
- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti. The subspecies on Saint Kitts is D. l. noblei. This agouti has also been round in an archeological site.
- Pennatomys nivalis, an extinct oryzomyine, is known from archeological sites.
Nevis
- Dasyprocta leporina, a northern South American agouti. It was recorded on the basis of remains from several archeological sites ranging in age from 100 BCE to 1200 CE.
- Pennatomys nivalis, an extinct oryzomyine, is known from archeological sites. Ages for these sites range from 790 BCE to 1200 CE.
[|Antigua]
Barbuda
is the other main island of Antigua and Barbuda. In addition to "Oryzomys hypenemus", another, smaller oryzomyine has also been recorded, Megalomys audreyae, though on the basis of very limited material. It has been suggested that this species is from Barbados instead. A later study reported "Undescribed species B", which was apparently widespread in the region, from archeological sites on Barbuda.Montserrat
is a small British island which has hosted several rodents.- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti. The subspecies on Montserrat is D. l. noblei. It is also known from archeological deposits.
- The Trant's and Radio Antilles Amerindian sites on Montserrat yielded possibly four different oryzomyines, each represented by limited and fragmentary material. A relatively small form, designated "Undescribed species A", is similar in size to oryzomyines from Saint Kitts and Anguilla, and a larger form is apparently identical to "Undescribed species B", described from Antigua and other islands. Two other possible species, one larger than the second and the other smaller than the first species, are documented by even more fragmentary material. Some of these may have been introduced by the Amerindians.
Guadeloupe
- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti. The subspecies on Guadeloupe is D. l. noblei. It has also been recorded from archeological deposits.
- A large oryzomyine, designated as "Undescribed species B" is known from several archeological sites on Guadeloupe.
- An unidentified Rattus has been recorded from an archeological deposit on Guadeloupe.
Marie Galante
- Dasyprocta leporina is known from an archeological deposit.
- A large oryzomyine, later designated as "Undescribed species B" has been described from an archeological site.
Dominica
- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti. The subspecies on Dominica is D. l. noblei.
Windward Islands
[|Martinique]
is a French overseas department. In addition to a very large oryzomyine, some introduced hystricognaths are known.- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti. The subspecies on Martinique is D. l. fulvus.
- Makalata didelphoides, a northern South American spiny rat also known from Trinidad and Tobago, has been recorded from Martinique, but the record is probably erroneous. In 1878, as museum curator, True received an animal captured on the island, but believed it to have been a single individual transported on a sailing vessel and not part of a local breeding population. This individual is represented by a single skin, but no cranial material.
- Megalomys desmarestii, a very large oryzomyine that became extinct by about 1900. It was closely related to Megalomys luciae, which occurred further south on Saint Lucia. It was as large as a cat.
Saint Lucia
- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti. The subspecies on Saint Lucia is D. l. fulvus.
- Megalomys luciae, an oryzomyine slightly smaller than its Martinique congener, Megalomys desmarestii, that became extinct during the 19th century.
Saint Vincent and Grenadines
- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti on Saint Vincent. The subspecies on Saint Vincent is D. l. albida.
- Oligoryzomys victus, a small oryzomyine related to South American Oligoryzomys. Known only from a single specimen captured on Saint Vincent around 1892, it is now presumed extinct.
Grenada
- An unidentified hutia is known from archeological deposits on Carriacou.
- Dasyprocta leporina, an introduced northern South American agouti. The subspecies on Grenada is D. l. albida. An unidentified agouti has been recorded from archeological deposits on Carriacou.
- Hydrochoerus gaylordi, an endemic capybara known from a few teeth of late Pliocene age. The same fauna also contained some sloth remains.
- Oryzomyines have been found in archeological deposits on Carriacou and Grenada itself, where two forms occur, which correspond in size to "Undescribed species A" and "B" recorded from Montserrat.
Barbados
Trinidad and Tobago
, two islands off northeastern Venezuela, form an independent country. Trinidad has a more diverse fauna than smaller and more remote Tobago, but as Pleistocene land-bridge islands, both have faunas that are more diverse than those of most Caribbean islands. On the other hand, endemism is much more limited than on other islands, with only one definite endemic species known.- Coendou prehensilis, a porcupine widespread on mainland South America that also occurs on Trinidad.
- Cuniculus paca, a large hystricognath widespread in Central and South America that also occurs on Trinidad.
- Dasyprocta leporina, an agouti from northern South America that occurs on Trinidad, as well as on Tobago; it has also been introduced to much of the Lesser Antilles.
- Heteromys anomalus, a heteromyid that occurs on both Trinidad and Tobago and also in northern South America and on Isla Margarita.
- Hylaeamys megacephalus, an oryzomyine that reaches the northern limit of its distribution in Trinidad and northern Venezuela and that occurs south to Paraguay.
- Makalata didelphoides, a spiny rat from northern South America that is found on both main islands. See also Martinique.
- Megalomys, or an animal similar to it, was described from Tobago in two 17th-century accounts, but no evidence to confirm its occurrence there has ever been found and the records may have referred to agoutis instead or have been borrowed from accounts of the Martinique Megalomys.
- Necromys urichi, an akodontine from both Trinidad and Tobago that also occurs in the highlands of Venezuela and adjacent countries. It was formerly placed in Akodon.
- Nectomys palmipes, an oryzomyine from Trinidad and the nearby mainland.
- Oecomys speciosus, an oryzomyine from Trinidad and nearby Colombia and Venezuela.
- Oecomys trinitatis, an oryzomyine from both islands with a large distribution in northern South America and into Central America. The taxonomic status of many populations is in doubt, however.
- Oligoryzomys fulvescens, an oryzomyine widespread in Central and northern South America and also reported from Trinidad.
- Proechimys trinitatus, a spiny rat known only from Trinidad that is part of a group containing several northern South American Proechimys.
- Rhipidomys couesi, a thomasomyine from lowland forests from Colombia east to Trinidad.
- Rhipidomys venezuelae, a thomasomyine that is found on Trinidad and Tobago and in the mountains of northern Venezuela and nearby Colombia.
- Sciurus granatensis, a squirrel from both main islands, also known from northern South America and southern Central America, as well as from Isla Margarita.
- Zygodontomys brevicauda, an oryzomyine with a distribution that spans northern South America and southern Central America, and also Trinidad and Tobago. Pleistocene fossils are known from [|Aruba].
- Zygodontomys sp., an extinct and undescribed oryzomyine from Trinidad. It was mentioned in a 1962 paper, but has received no attention since and no detailed information has been published.
ABC islands
Bonaire
is the easternmost of the ABC islands. Two species of oryzomyines in a single genus, restricted to Bonaire, are known from Pleistocene fossil deposits, together with an indeterminate third species:- Agathaeromys donovani is known from four sites that are probably 900 000 to 540 000 years old.
- Agathaeromys praeuniversitatis is known from a single site that is probably 540 000 to 230 000 years old.
- An indeterminate sigmodontine is known from a single edentulous mandible from one of the sites that also yielded A. donovani.
[|Curaçao]
- Calomys hummelincki, a small phyllotine also known from nearby Aruba and the adjacent mainland. It has been suggested to have been introduced to the area, but this is no longer accepted.
- Dushimys larsi, an oryzomyine found at a single Middle Pleistocene site near Duivelsklip.
- Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris, the capybara, which is widespread in South America. It is known from fragmentary remains from Tafelberg Santa Barbara on southeastern Curaçao, a site that may be of considerable antiquity.
- Megalomys curazensis, a large oryzomyine from several Pleistocene sites that may also have occurred on Aruba.
- Oryzomys gorgasi, a rare oryzomyine also known from mainland Colombia and Venezuela that formerly occurred on Curaçao, but that is now extinct there. It was described as a separate species, Oryzomys curasoae, but it cannot be distinguished from mainland examples of O. gorgasi.
- Oryzomys sp. Several different oryzomyines from Curaçao have been recorded under this name from locations including Tafelberg Santa Barbara, Bullenbaai, and Noordkant. Some may be referable to O. curasoae.
Aruba
- Calomys hummelincki, a phyllotine also known from nearby Curaçao.
- Megalomys curazensis. A few molars from a cave at Seroe Canashito form the only record of this species from Aruba; it has been suggested that they were transported there by raptors.
- Oligoryzomys sp. An unnamed species of this genus occurs in the Pleistocene of Aruba.
- Oryzomys sp. An extinct oryzomyine from Seroe Canashito has been recorded under this name.
- Sigmodon hirsutus, a widespread Central American and northern South American species known from Isla and Seroe Canashito.
- Zygodontomys brevicauda, another widespread Central American and northern South American species, but known only from Seroe Canashito.
Miscellaneous
Florida Keys
The Florida Keys are a group of islands near the Florida mainland. The rodent fauna includes two species which both also occur on the adjacent mainland.- Cricetomys gambianus, an introduced nesomyid from Africa. It has established a breeding population on Grassy Key.
- Neotoma floridana, a widespread woodrat from the eastern United States. The Florida Keys population has been recognized as a separate subspecies, N. f. smalli.
- Oryzomys palustris, another species that is widespread in the eastern U.S. Different portions of the Florida Keys population have been recognized as the subspecies O. p. natator and as a separate species, O. argentatus; the latter is not currently accepted.
Bahamas
- Geocapromys ingrahami, a hutia indigenous to the Plana Cays that has later also been introduced to Little Wax Cay and Waderick Wells Cay. It is also known from archeological remains on many other islands, which represent two subspecies that are now extinct.
Cayman Islands
- Capromys sp., an undescribed hutia known from abundant subfossil material. It is close to the common Cuban Capromys pilorides, but smaller. The earliest radiocarbon records are latest Pleistocene and the latest are from around 1600 CE.
- Dasyprocta punctata, a Central and South American agouti that has been introduced to the Cayman Islands and also to Cuba.
- Geocapromys sp., another undescribed hutia. Two species are known: a smaller one on Grand Cayman and a larger on Cayman Brac. They are most similar to the Cuban Geocapromys columbianus, but smaller. As with the Cayman Capromys, the earliest records are latest Pleistocene and the latest are post-Columbian.
Cozumel
- Cuniculus paca, the lowland paca, has been recorded a few times; it is not known whether or not it has been introduced.
- Dasyprocta punctata, an agouti that was introduced to the island.
- Oryzomys couesi, a species widespread from southern Texas to northern Colombia. The Cozumel population has been regarded as a separate species, O. cozumelae, but this is not currently accepted.
- Peromyscus leucopus, a widespread deermouse species in Mexico, the U.S., and southern Canada. The Cozumel population has been recognized as a separate subspecies, P. l. cozumelae. Another species of deermouse, P. yucatanicus, has also been recorded, but this is likely the result of confusion with P. leucopus.
- Reithrodontomys spectabilis, a large harvest mouse restricted to Cozumel and most closely related to the mainland R. gracilis.
Honduran islands
- Dasyprocta ruatanica, an agouti known only from Roatán in the Bay Islands. It resembles the mainland Dasyprocta punctata, but is smaller.
- Geocapromys thoracatus, a hutia which occurred only on the remote Swan Islands. It probably became extinct in the 1950s and may be most closely related to the Jamaica species Geocapromys brownii.
- Oryzomys couesi, a widespread mainland species also known from Roatán.
- Sigmodon hispidus has been recorded from Roatán and nearby Guanaja, but the systematic status of Honduran populations previously ascribed to this species is presently unclear.
Nueva Esparta
- Heteromys anomalus, a heteromyid from both Isla Margarita and Trinidad and Tobago.
- Oryzomys sp. An indeterminate Oryzomys was recorded from Isla Margarita in 1940 on the basis of isolated mandibles found in a cave, but the record has not been revised since.
- Pattonomys. Echimys semivillosus is known from Isla Margarita, but this species has since been transferred to the genus Pattonomys and split into four species; it is unclear which of those occurs on Isla Margarita.
- Sciurus granatensis, a squirrel known from Isla Margarita as well as Trinidad and Tobago.
Escudo de Veraguas
- Hoplomys gymnurus, a myocastorine rodent, appears larger and more robust on the island than mainland individuals, but has smaller and weaker 'spines'.
Literature cited
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