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{{pp|small=yes}}
{{short description|Family of mammals}}
{{short description|Family of mammals}}
{{for multi|the Australasian marsupials known as "possums"|Phalangeriformes|other uses|Opossum (disambiguation)}}
{{for multi|the Australasian marsupials known as "possums"|Phalangeriformes|other uses|Opossum (disambiguation)}}
{{Automatic taxobox
{{Automatic taxobox
| name = Didelphidae<ref name=msw3>{{MSW3 Gardner|pages=3–18}}</ref>
| name = Didelphidae<ref name=msw3>{{MSW3 Gardner|pages=3–18}}</ref>
| fossil_range = {{Fossil range|Early Miocene | Recent|ref=<ref>{{cite journal|author= Goin, Francisco |author2=Abello, Alejandra |author3=Bellosi, Eduardo |author4=Kay, Richard |author5=Madden, Richard |author6=Carlini, Alfredo |title= Los Metatheria sudamericanos de comienzos del Neógeno (Mioceno Temprano, Edad-mamífero Colhuehuapense). Parte I: Introducción, Didelphimorphia y Sparassodonta |journal=Ameghiniana|volume=44|issue=1|pages=29–71|year=2007|url=http://www.scielo.org.ar/scielo.php?pid=S0002-70142007000100003&script=sci_abstract}}</ref>}}
| fossil_range = {{Fossil range|Early Miocene | Recent}}<ref>{{cite journal|author= Goin, Francisco |author2=Abello, Alejandra |author3=Bellosi, Eduardo |author4=Kay, Richard |author5=Madden, Richard |author6=Carlini, Alfredo |title= Los Metatheria sudamericanos de comienzos del Neógeno (Mioceno Temprano, Edad-mamífero Colhuehuapense). Parte I: Introducción, Didelphimorphia y Sparassodonta |journal=Ameghiniana|volume=44|issue=1|pages=29–71|year=2007|url=http://www.scielo.org.ar/scielo.php?pid=S0002-70142007000100003&script=sci_abstract}}</ref>
| image = Didelphis virginiana with young.JPG
| image = Didelphis virginiana with young.JPG
| image_caption = [[Virginia opossum]], ''[[Didelphis]] virginiana'', the only U.S. and Canadian species (mother with nine young)
| image_caption = [[Virginia opossum]], ''[[Didelphis]] virginiana'', the only U.S. and Canadian species (mother with nine young)
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| type_genus_authority = [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], 1758
| type_genus_authority = [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], 1758
| taxon = Didelphidae
| taxon = Didelphidae
| authority = [[John Edward Gray|Gray]], 1821
| authority = [[John Edward Gray|J. E. Gray]], 1821
| diversity = 127 species
| diversity = 126 species
| subdivision_ranks = Genera
| subdivision_ranks = Genera
| subdivision = Several; see [[#Classification|text]]
| subdivision = Several; see [[#Classification|text]]
}}
}}


'''Opossums''' ({{IPAc-en|ə|ˈ|p|ɒ|s|əm}}) are members of the [[marsupial]] order '''Didelphimorphia''' ({{IPAc-en|d|aɪ|ˌ|d|ɛ|l|f|ᵻ|ˈ|m|ɔːr|f|i|ə}}) [[Endemism|endemic]] to the [[Americas]]. The largest order of marsupials in the [[Western Hemisphere]], it comprises 93 species in 18 [[Genus|genera]]. Opossums originated in [[South America]] and entered [[North America]] in the [[Great American Interchange]] following the connection of North and South America.
'''Opossums''' ({{IPAc-en|ə|ˈ|p|ɒ|s|əm}}) are members of the [[marsupial]] order '''Didelphimorphia''' ({{IPAc-en|d|aɪ|ˌ|d|ɛ|l|f|ᵻ|ˈ|m|ɔːr|f|i|ə}}) [[Endemism|endemic]] to the [[Americas]]. The largest order of marsupials in the [[Western Hemisphere]], it comprises 126 species in 18 [[Genus|genera]]. Opossums originated in [[South America]] and entered [[North America]] in the [[Great American Interchange]] following the connection of North and South America.


The [[Virginia opossum]] is the only species found in the United States and Canada. It is often simply referred to as an '''opossum''', and in North America it is commonly referred to as a '''possum'''<ref name="NationalGeographic">{{cite magazine |url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/group/opossums/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170221153623/http://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/group/opossums/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 21, 2017 |title=Opossums |magazine=[[National Geographic]] |access-date=September 21, 2018}}</ref> ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|ɒ|s|əm}}; sometimes rendered as ''{{'}}possum'' in written form to indicate the dropped "o"). Opossums should not be confused with the [[Australasian realm|Australasian]] arboreal marsupials of suborder [[Phalangeriformes]] that are also called possums because of their resemblance to the Didelphimorphia. The opossum is typically a nonaggressive animal and almost never carries the virus for rabies.<ref>{{cite web |title=Rabies: A Forgotten Killer Greatest Risk from Wildlife, Especially Bats |url=https://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/rabies/pdf/vs-0612-wildlife-rabies-h.pdf |publisher=CDC}}</ref>
The [[Virginia opossum]] is the only species found in the United States and Canada. It is often simply referred to as an '''opossum''', and in North America it is commonly referred to as a '''possum'''<ref name="NationalGeographic">{{cite magazine |url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/group/opossums/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170221153623/http://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/group/opossums/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 21, 2017 |title=Opossums |magazine=[[National Geographic]] |access-date=September 21, 2018}}</ref> ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|ɒ|s|əm}}; sometimes rendered as ''{{'}}possum'' in written form to indicate the dropped "o"). Opossums should not be confused with the [[Australasian realm|Australasian]] arboreal marsupials of suborder [[Phalangeriformes]] that are also called possums because of their resemblance to the [[Didelphimorphia|Didelphimorphia.]] The opossum is typically a nonaggressive animal and almost never carries the virus for rabies.<ref>{{cite web |title=Rabies: A Forgotten Killer Greatest Risk from Wildlife, Especially Bats |url=https://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/rabies/pdf/vs-0612-wildlife-rabies-h.pdf |publisher=CDC}}</ref>


== Etymology ==
== Etymology ==
The word ''opossum'' is borrowed from the [[Powhatan language]] and was first recorded between 1607 and 1611 by [[John Smith (explorer)|John Smith]] (as ''opassom'') and [[William Strachey]] (as ''aposoum'').<ref>{{cite book |last=Mithun |first=Marianne |date=2001 |title=The Languages of Native North America |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=332 |isbn=978-0-521-29875-9 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ALnf3s2m7PkC}}</ref> Siebert reconstructs the word phonemically as /a·passem/.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Crawford|first1=James Mack|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qx4mAQAAMAAJ&q=opossum|title=Studies in Southeastern Indian Languages|last2=Crawford|first2=James D.|date=1975|publisher=University of Georgia Press|isbn=978-0-8203-0334-5|language=en}}</ref> ''Possum'' was first recorded in 1613. Both men encountered the language at the English settlement of [[Jamestown, Virginia]], which Smith helped to found and where Strachey later served as its first secretary.<ref name="Siebert">{{cite encyclopedia | last=Siebert | first=Frank T. Jr. |editor-last=Crawford |editor-first=James Mack |date=1975 |encyclopedia=Studies in Southeastern Indian Languages |title=Resurrecting Virginia Algonquian from the Dead: The Reconstituted and Historical Phonology of Powhatan |publisher=University of Georgia Press}}</ref> Strachey's notes describe the opossum as a "beast in bigness of a pig and in taste alike," while Smith recorded it "hath an head like a swine ... tail like a rat ... of the bigness of a cat."<ref name="Siebert" /> The Powhatan word ultimately derives from a [[Proto-Algonquian language|Proto-Algonquian]] word (''*wa·p-aʔθemwa'') meaning "white dog or dog-like beast."<ref name="Siebert" />
The word ''opossum'' is derived from the [[Powhatan language]] and was first recorded between 1607 and 1611 by [[John Smith (explorer)|John Smith]] (as ''opassom'') and [[William Strachey]] (as ''aposoum'').<ref>{{cite book |last=Mithun |first=Marianne |date=2001 |title=The Languages of Native North America |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=332 |isbn=978-0-521-29875-9 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ALnf3s2m7PkC}}</ref> Siebert reconstructs the word phonemically as /a·passem/.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Crawford|first1=James Mack|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qx4mAQAAMAAJ&q=opossum|title=Studies in Southeastern Indian Languages|last2=Crawford|first2=James D.|date=1975|publisher=University of Georgia Press|isbn=978-0-8203-0334-5|language=en}}</ref> ''Possum'' was first recorded in 1613. Both men encountered the language at the English settlement of [[Jamestown, Virginia]], which Smith helped to found and where Strachey later served as its first secretary.<ref name="Siebert">{{cite encyclopedia | last=Siebert | first=Frank T. Jr. |editor-last=Crawford |editor-first=James Mack |date=1975 |encyclopedia=Studies in Southeastern Indian Languages |title=Resurrecting Virginia Algonquian from the Dead: The Reconstituted and Historical Phonology of Powhatan |publisher=University of Georgia Press}}</ref> Strachey's notes describe the opossum as a "beast in bigness of a pig and in taste alike," while Smith recorded it "hath an head like a swine ... tail like a rat ... of the bigness of a cat."<ref name="Siebert" /> The Powhatan word ultimately derives from a [[Proto-Algonquian language|Proto-Algonquian]] word (''*wa·p-aʔθemwa'') meaning "white dog or dog-like beast."<ref name="Siebert" />


Following the arrival of Europeans in [[Australia]], the term ''possum'' was borrowed to describe distantly related [[Australidelphia|Australian marsupials]] of the suborder [[Phalangeriformes]],<ref>{{cite dictionary | title = The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition | year = 2014 | entry = possum | publisher = Houghton Mifflin Harcourt | url = http://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=possum | access-date = 12 July 2014}}</ref> which are more closely related to other Australian marsupials such as kangaroos.
Following the arrival of Europeans in [[Australia]], the term ''possum'' was borrowed to describe distantly related [[Australidelphia|Australian marsupials]] of the suborder [[Phalangeriformes]],<ref>{{cite dictionary | title = The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition | year = 2014 | entry = possum | publisher = Houghton Mifflin Harcourt | url = http://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=possum | access-date = 12 July 2014}}</ref> which are more closely related to other Australian marsupials such as kangaroos.
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Didelphimorphs have a [[plantigrade]] stance (feet flat on the ground) and the hind [[Foot|feet]] have an [[Thumb|opposable digit]] with no [[claw]]. Like some [[New World monkey]]s, some opossums have [[Prehensility|prehensile tails]]. Like most marsupials, many females have a pouch. The tail and parts of the feet bear [[scute]]s. The [[stomach]] is simple, with a small [[cecum]].<ref name = "Krause"/> Like most marsupials, the male opossum has [[Marsupial penis|a forked penis]] bearing twin [[Glans penis|glande]]s.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1515/mamm.1997.61.2.161|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/240754313 |title=Penis morphology as a distinctive character of the murine opossum group (Marsupialia Didelphidae): A preliminary report |journal=Mammalia |volume=61 |issue=2 |year=1997 |last1=Martinelli |first1=P.M. |last2=Nogueira |first2=J.C. |s2cid=84674547 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|url=http://ctcusp.org/pdf/references2013/2013_37.pdf |pmid=23362127|year=2013|last1=De Barros|first1=M. A.|title=Marsupial morphology of reproduction: South America opossum male model|journal=Microscopy Research and Technique|volume=76|issue=4|pages=388–97|last2=Panattoni Martins|first2=J. F.|last3=Samoto|first3=V. Y.|last4=Oliveira|first4=V. C.|last5=Gonçalves|first5=N.|last6=Mançanares|first6=C. A.|last7=Vidane|first7=A.|last8=Carvalho|first8=A. F.|last9=Ambrósio|first9=C. E.|last10=Miglino|first10=M. A.|doi=10.1002/jemt.22178|s2cid=27200317}}</ref><ref name="Krause">Krause, William J.; Krause, Winifred A. (2006).[https://web.missouri.edu/~krausew/Histology/Home_files/opossum.pdf ''The Opossum: Its Amazing Story''] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121211214644/https://web.missouri.edu/~krausew/Histology/Home_files/opossum.pdf |date=2012-12-11 }}. Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri. p. 39</ref>
Didelphimorphs have a [[plantigrade]] stance (feet flat on the ground) and the hind [[Foot|feet]] have an [[Thumb|opposable digit]] with no [[claw]]. Like some [[New World monkey]]s, some opossums have [[Prehensility|prehensile tails]]. Like most marsupials, many females have a pouch. The tail and parts of the feet bear [[scute]]s. The [[stomach]] is simple, with a small [[cecum]].<ref name = "Krause"/> Like most marsupials, the male opossum has [[Marsupial penis|a forked penis]] bearing twin [[Glans penis|glande]]s.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1515/mamm.1997.61.2.161|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/240754313 |title=Penis morphology as a distinctive character of the murine opossum group (Marsupialia Didelphidae): A preliminary report |journal=Mammalia |volume=61 |issue=2 |year=1997 |last1=Martinelli |first1=P.M. |last2=Nogueira |first2=J.C. |s2cid=84674547 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|url=http://ctcusp.org/pdf/references2013/2013_37.pdf |pmid=23362127|year=2013|last1=De Barros|first1=M. A.|title=Marsupial morphology of reproduction: South America opossum male model|journal=Microscopy Research and Technique|volume=76|issue=4|pages=388–97|last2=Panattoni Martins|first2=J. F.|last3=Samoto|first3=V. Y.|last4=Oliveira|first4=V. C.|last5=Gonçalves|first5=N.|last6=Mançanares|first6=C. A.|last7=Vidane|first7=A.|last8=Carvalho|first8=A. F.|last9=Ambrósio|first9=C. E.|last10=Miglino|first10=M. A.|doi=10.1002/jemt.22178|s2cid=27200317}}</ref><ref name="Krause">Krause, William J.; Krause, Winifred A. (2006).[https://web.missouri.edu/~krausew/Histology/Home_files/opossum.pdf ''The Opossum: Its Amazing Story''] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121211214644/https://web.missouri.edu/~krausew/Histology/Home_files/opossum.pdf |date=2012-12-11 }}. Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri. p. 39</ref>


Although all living opossums are essentially opportunistic [[omnivores]], different species vary in the amount of meat and vegetation they include in their diet. Members of the [[Caluromyinae]] are essentially [[frugivorous]]; whereas the [[lutrine opossum]] and [[Patagonian opossum]] primarily feed on other animals.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Vieira|first1=Emerson R.|last2=De Moraes|first2=D. Astua|publisher=Csiro Publishing|year= 2003|isbn=978-0-643-06634-2|title=Predators with Pouches: the biology of carnivorous marsupials|pages=267–280 |chapter=Carnivory and insectivory in Neotropical marsupials}}</ref> The [[water opossum]] or yapok (''Chironectes minimus'') is particularly unusual, as it is the only living semi-aquatic marsupial, using its webbed hindlimbs to dive in search of freshwater mollusks and crayfish.<ref>{{cite journal|title=''Chironectes minimus''|first=Larry G.|last=Marshall|journal=[[Mammalian Species]]|year=1978|volume=109|pages=1–6|doi=10.2307/3504051|issue=99|jstor=3504051|doi-access=free}}</ref> The extinct ''[[Thylophorops]]'', the largest known opossum at {{Cvt|4-7|kg}}, was a macropredator.<ref name="Goin 2009 35–46">{{cite journal|title=A new large didelphid of the genus ''Thylophorops'' (Mammalia: Didelphimorphia: Didelphidae), from the late Tertiary of the Pampean Region (Argentina)|first=Francisco J.|last=Goin|author2=Natalia Zimicz |author3=Martin de los Reyes |author4=Leopoldo Soibelzon |url=http://biostor.org/reference/19000|journal=[[Zootaxa]]|year=2009|volume=2005|pages=35–46|doi=10.11646/zootaxa.2005.1.3}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1007/s10914-011-9175-9|title=The Evolution of the Cenozoic Terrestrial Mammalian Predator Guild in South America: Competition or Replacement?|journal=Journal of Mammalian Evolution|volume=20|pages=3–21|year=2011|last1=Prevosti|first1=Francisco J.|last2=Forasiepi|first2=Analía|last3=Zimicz|first3=Natalia|s2cid=15751319}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1080/08912963.2015.1089868|title=Mammalian predator–prey relationships and reoccupation of burrows in the Pliocene of the Pampean Region (Argentina): New ichnological and taphonomic evidence|journal=Historical Biology|volume=28|issue=8|pages=1026–1040|year=2015|last1=Cenizo|first1=Marcos|last2=Soibelzon|first2=Esteban|last3=Magnussen Saffer|first3=Mariano|s2cid=83862150}}</ref> Most opossums are [[scansorial]], well-adapted to life in the trees or on the ground, but members of the [[Caluromyinae]] and [[Glironia|Glironiinae]] are primarily arboreal, whereas species of ''[[Metachirus]]'', ''[[Monodelphis]]'', and to a lesser degree ''[[Didelphis]]'' show adaptations for life on the ground.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Phylogenetic analysis of postcranial skeletal morphology in didelphid marsupials|first=David A.|last=Flores|journal=[[Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History]]|year=2009|volume=320|pages=1–81|doi=10.1206/320.1|hdl=2246/5953|s2cid=54177473|hdl-access=free}}</ref> ''[[Metachirus nudicaudatus]]'', found in the upper [[Amazon basin]], consumes fruit seeds, small [[vertebrate]] creatures like birds and reptiles and [[invertebrate]]s like [[crayfish]] and [[snail]]s, but seems to be mainly [[insectivorous]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Gardner |first1=Alfred |title=Mammals of South America Volume 1 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |page=34}}</ref>
Although all living opossums are essentially opportunistic [[omnivores]], different species vary in the amount of meat and vegetation they include in their diet. Members of the [[Caluromyinae]] are essentially [[frugivorous]]; whereas the [[lutrine opossum]] and [[Patagonian opossum]] primarily feed on other animals.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Vieira|first1=Emerson R.|last2=De Moraes|first2=D. Astua|publisher=Csiro Publishing|year= 2003|isbn=978-0-643-06634-2|title=Predators with Pouches: the biology of carnivorous marsupials|pages=267–280 |chapter=Carnivory and insectivory in Neotropical marsupials}}</ref> The [[water opossum]] or yapok (''Chironectes minimus'') is particularly unusual, as it is the only living semi-aquatic marsupial, using its webbed hindlimbs to dive in search of freshwater mollusks and crayfish.<ref>{{cite journal|title=''Chironectes minimus''|first=Larry G.|last=Marshall|journal=[[Mammalian Species]]|year=1978|volume=109|pages=1–6|doi=10.2307/3504051|issue=99|jstor=3504051|doi-access=free}}</ref> The extinct ''[[Thylophorops]]'', the largest known opossum at {{Cvt|4-7|kg}}, was a macropredator.<ref name="Goin 2009 35–46">{{cite journal|title=A new large didelphid of the genus ''Thylophorops'' (Mammalia: Didelphimorphia: Didelphidae), from the late Tertiary of the Pampean Region (Argentina)|first=Francisco J.|last=Goin|author2=Natalia Zimicz |author3=Martin de los Reyes |author4=Leopoldo Soibelzon |url=http://biostor.org/reference/19000|journal=[[Zootaxa]]|year=2009|volume=2005|pages=35–46|doi=10.11646/zootaxa.2005.1.3|hdl=11336/67625|hdl-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1007/s10914-011-9175-9|title=The Evolution of the Cenozoic Terrestrial Mammalian Predator Guild in South America: Competition or Replacement?|journal=Journal of Mammalian Evolution|volume=20|pages=3–21|year=2011|last1=Prevosti|first1=Francisco J.|last2=Forasiepi|first2=Analía|last3=Zimicz|first3=Natalia|s2cid=15751319|hdl=11336/2663|hdl-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1080/08912963.2015.1089868|title=Mammalian predator–prey relationships and reoccupation of burrows in the Pliocene of the Pampean Region (Argentina): New ichnological and taphonomic evidence|journal=Historical Biology|volume=28|issue=8|pages=1026–1040|year=2015|last1=Cenizo|first1=Marcos|last2=Soibelzon|first2=Esteban|last3=Magnussen Saffer|first3=Mariano|s2cid=83862150}}</ref> Most opossums are [[scansorial]], well-adapted to life in the trees or on the ground, but members of the [[Caluromyinae]] and [[Glironia|Glironiinae]] are primarily arboreal, whereas species of ''[[Metachirus]]'', ''[[Monodelphis]]'', and to a lesser degree ''[[Didelphis]]'' show adaptations for life on the ground.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Phylogenetic analysis of postcranial skeletal morphology in didelphid marsupials|first=David A.|last=Flores|journal=[[Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History]]|year=2009|volume=320|pages=1–81|doi=10.1206/320.1|hdl=2246/5953|s2cid=54177473|hdl-access=free}}</ref> ''[[Metachirus nudicaudatus]]'', found in the upper [[Amazon basin]], consumes fruit seeds, small [[vertebrate]] creatures like birds and reptiles and [[invertebrate]]s like [[crayfish]] and [[snail]]s, but seems to be mainly [[insectivorous]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Gardner |first1=Alfred |title=Mammals of South America Volume 1 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |page=34}}</ref>


[[File:Opossum (Mar 2021).jpg|thumb|An opossum on top of a fence]]
[[File:Opossum (Mar 2021).jpg|thumb|An opossum on top of a fence]]
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In northern/central Mexico, opossums are known as ''tlacuache'' or ''tlacuatzin''. Their tails are eaten as a [[Alternative medicine|folk remedy]] to improve fertility.<ref>{{cite book|chapter-url=http://www.medicinatradicionalmexicana.unam.mx/|language=es|title=Biblioteca Digital de la Medicina Tradicional Mexicana|chapter=tlacuache|publisher=Biblioteca Digital de la Medicina Tradicional Mexicana}}</ref> In the Yucatán peninsula they are known in the [[Yucatec Maya language|Yucatec Mayan language]] as "och"<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HJCza7sWUaMC&pg=PA149|title=Telling and Being Told: Storytelling and Cultural Control in Contemporary Yucatec Maya Literatures|first=Paul M.|last=Worley|date=2013|publisher=University of Arizona Press|via=Google Books|isbn=9780816530267}}</ref> and they are not considered part of the regular diet by Mayan people, but still considered edible in times of famine.
In northern/central Mexico, opossums are known as ''tlacuache'' or ''tlacuatzin''. Their tails are eaten as a [[Alternative medicine|folk remedy]] to improve fertility.<ref>{{cite book|chapter-url=http://www.medicinatradicionalmexicana.unam.mx/|language=es|title=Biblioteca Digital de la Medicina Tradicional Mexicana|chapter=tlacuache|publisher=Biblioteca Digital de la Medicina Tradicional Mexicana}}</ref> In the Yucatán peninsula they are known in the [[Yucatec Maya language|Yucatec Mayan language]] as "och"<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HJCza7sWUaMC&pg=PA149|title=Telling and Being Told: Storytelling and Cultural Control in Contemporary Yucatec Maya Literatures|first=Paul M.|last=Worley|date=2013|publisher=University of Arizona Press|via=Google Books|isbn=9780816530267}}</ref> and they are not considered part of the regular diet by Mayan people, but still considered edible in times of famine.


Opossum oil (possum grease) is high in [[essential fatty acid]]s and has been used as a chest rub and a carrier for [[arthritis]] remedies given as salves.<ref>{{cite journal|doi= 10.1590/S1981-81222008000300005|title= Animais medicinais: Conhecimento e uso entre as populações ribeirinhas do rio Negro, Amazonas, Brasil|journal= Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências Humanas|volume= 3|issue= 3|pages= 343–357|year= 2008|last1= Silva|first1= Andréa Leme da|doi-access= free}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1590/1809-4392200332290|title=Produtos e subprodutos da medicina popular comercializados na cidade de Boa Vista, Roraima|journal=Acta Amazonica|volume=33|issue=2|pages=281–290|year=2003|last1=Pinto|first1=Angélica Auxiliadora da Costa|last2=Maduro|first2=Cice Batalha|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1186/1746-4269-8-37|pmid=23013927|pmc=3502351|title=Medicinal use of fauna by a traditional community in the Brazilian Amazonia|journal=Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine|volume=8|pages=37|year=2012|last1=Barros|first1=Flávio B.|last2=Varela|first2=Susana AM|last3=Pereira|first3=Henrique M.|last4=Vicente|first4=Luís |doi-access=free }}</ref>
Opossum oil (possum grease) is high in [[essential fatty acid]]s and has been used as a chest rub and a carrier for [[arthritis]] remedies given as salves.<ref>{{cite journal|doi= 10.1590/S1981-81222008000300005|title= Animais medicinais: Conhecimento e uso entre as populações ribeirinhas do rio Negro, Amazonas, Brasil|journal= Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências Humanas|volume= 3|issue= 3|pages= 343–357|year= 2008|last1= Silva|first1= Andréa Leme da|doi-access= free|hdl= 11449/27066|hdl-access= free}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1590/1809-4392200332290|title=Produtos e subprodutos da medicina popular comercializados na cidade de Boa Vista, Roraima|journal=Acta Amazonica|volume=33|issue=2|pages=281–290|year=2003|last1=Pinto|first1=Angélica Auxiliadora da Costa|last2=Maduro|first2=Cice Batalha|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1186/1746-4269-8-37|pmid=23013927|pmc=3502351|title=Medicinal use of fauna by a traditional community in the Brazilian Amazonia|journal=Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine|volume=8|pages=37|year=2012|last1=Barros|first1=Flávio B.|last2=Varela|first2=Susana AM|last3=Pereira|first3=Henrique M.|last4=Vicente|first4=Luís |doi-access=free }}</ref>


Opossum pelts have long been part of the [[fur trade]].
Opossum pelts have long been part of the [[fur trade]].
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|1=''[[Lutreolina]]''
|1=''[[Lutreolina]]''
|2={{clade
|2={{clade
|1=''[[Philander (genus)|Philander]]''
|1=''[[Philander (mammal)|Philander]]''
|2=''[[Didelphis]]''
|2=''[[Didelphis]]''
}}
}}
Line 180: Line 181:


{{cladogram
{{cladogram
|title=Cladogram by Álvarez-Carretero et al. 2022<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Álvarez-Carretero |first1=Sandra |last2=Tamuri |first2=Asif U. |last3=Battini |first3=Matteo |last4=Nascimento |first4=Fabrícia F. |last5=Carlisle |first5=Emily |last6=Asher |first6=Robert J. |last7=Yang |first7=Ziheng |last8=Donoghue |first8=Philip C.J. |last9=dos Reis |first9=Mario |year=2022 |title=A species-level timeline of mammal evolution integrating phylogenomic data |journal=Nature |volume= 602|issue=7896 |pages=263–267 |doi=10.1038/s41586-021-04341-1 |url=}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Álvarez-Carretero |first1=Sandra |last2=Tamuri |first2=Asif U. |last3=Battini |first3=Matteo |last4=Nascimento |first4=Fabrícia F. |last5=Carlisle |first5=Emily |last6=Asher |first6=Robert J. |last7=Yang |first7=Ziheng |last8=Donoghue |first8=Philip C.J. |last9=dos Reis |first9=Mario |year=2022 |title=4705sp_colours_mammal-time.tree |journal=Nature |volume= |issue=602 |pages=263–267 |doi=10.1038/s41586-021-04341-1 |url=https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_for_A_Species-Level_Timeline_of_Mammal_Evolution_Integrating_Phylogenomic_Data_/14885691}}</ref>|
|title=Cladogram by Álvarez-Carretero et al. 2022<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Álvarez-Carretero |first1=Sandra |last2=Tamuri |first2=Asif U. |last3=Battini |first3=Matteo |last4=Nascimento |first4=Fabrícia F. |last5=Carlisle |first5=Emily |last6=Asher |first6=Robert J. |last7=Yang |first7=Ziheng |last8=Donoghue |first8=Philip C.J. |last9=dos Reis |first9=Mario |year=2022 |title=A species-level timeline of mammal evolution integrating phylogenomic data |journal=Nature |volume= 602|issue=7896 |pages=263–267 |doi=10.1038/s41586-021-04341-1 |url=|hdl=1983/de841853-d57b-40d9-876f-9bfcf7253f12 |hdl-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Álvarez-Carretero |first1=Sandra |last2=Tamuri |first2=Asif U. |last3=Battini |first3=Matteo |last4=Nascimento |first4=Fabrícia F. |last5=Carlisle |first5=Emily |last6=Asher |first6=Robert J. |last7=Yang |first7=Ziheng |last8=Donoghue |first8=Philip C.J. |last9=dos Reis |first9=Mario |year=2022 |title=4705sp_colours_mammal-time.tree |journal=Nature |volume= |issue=602 |pages=263–267 |doi=10.1038/s41586-021-04341-1 |url=https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_for_A_Species-Level_Timeline_of_Mammal_Evolution_Integrating_Phylogenomic_Data_/14885691|hdl=1983/de841853-d57b-40d9-876f-9bfcf7253f12 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>|
{{clade|style=font-size:90%;line-height:100%;width:350px;
{{clade|style=font-size:90%;line-height:100%;width:350px;
|1={{clade
|1={{clade
Line 219: Line 220:
|1=''[[Lutreolina]]''
|1=''[[Lutreolina]]''
|2={{clade
|2={{clade
|1=''[[Philander (genus)|Philander]]''
|1=''[[Philander (mammal)|Philander]]''
|2=''[[Didelphis]]'' (incl. ''[[Metachirus]]'')
|2=''[[Didelphis]]'' (incl. ''[[Metachirus]]'')
}}
}}
Line 246: Line 247:
|}}
|}}


Classification based on Voss and Jansa (2009), species based on the [[American Society of Mammalogists]] (2021)<ref name=VossJansa2009>{{cite journal|title=Phylogenetic relationships and classification of didelphid marsupials, an extant radiation of New World metatherian mammals|first=Robert S.|last=Voss|author2=Jansa, Sharon A. |journal=[[Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History]]|year=2009|volume=322|pages=1–177|doi=10.1206/322.1|hdl=2246/5975|s2cid=85017821|hdl-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|last=Database|first=Mammal Diversity|title=Mammal Diversity Database|date=2021-08-10|doi=10.5281/zenodo.5175993 |url=https://zenodo.org/record/5175993|access-date=2021-11-06}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=McClure|first=Sonny R.|title=New opossum species named after UWO biologist Greg Adler|url=https://www.abigailgroff.com/new-opossum-species-named-after-uwo-biologist-greg-adler/|access-date=2021-12-13|website=www.abigailgroff.com|date=8 December 2021 |language=en-US}}</ref>
Classification based on Voss (2022), species based on the [[American Society of Mammalogists]] (2023)<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Voss |first=Robert S. |date=2022-04-04 |title=An Annotated Checklist of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae) |url=https://bioone.org/journals/bulletin-of-the-american-museum-of-natural-history/volume-455/issue-1/0003-0090.455.1.1/An-Annotated-Checklist-of-Recent-Opossums-Mammalia-Didelphidae/10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1.full |journal=Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History |volume=455 |issue=1 |pages=1–76 |doi=10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1 |issn=0003-0090}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Mammal Diversity |date=2023-04-15 |title=Mammal Diversity Database |url=https://zenodo.org/records/7830771 |access-date=2023-12-11 |doi=10.5281/zenodo.7830771}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=McClure|first=Sonny R.|title=New opossum species named after UWO biologist Greg Adler|url=https://www.abigailgroff.com/new-opossum-species-named-after-uwo-biologist-greg-adler/|access-date=2021-12-13|website=www.abigailgroff.com|date=8 December 2021 |language=en-US}}</ref>


* '''Family Didelphidae'''
* '''Family Didelphidae'''
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*** Tribe [[Metachirini]] [[File:Vieraugen-Opossum (Metachirus nudicaudatus).jpg|thumb|[[Brown four-eyed opossum]], ''Metachirus nudicaudatus'']]
*** Tribe [[Metachirini]] [[File:Vieraugen-Opossum (Metachirus nudicaudatus).jpg|thumb|[[Brown four-eyed opossum]], ''Metachirus nudicaudatus'']]
**** Genus ''[[Metachirus]]''
**** Genus ''[[Metachirus]]''
***** [[Brown four-eyed opossum|Guianan brown four-eyed opossum]] (''Metachirus nudicaudatus'')
***** [[Aritana's brown four-eyed opossum]] (''Metachirus aritanai'')
*****[[Common brown four-eyed opossum]] (''Metachirus myosuros'')
*****[[Common brown four-eyed opossum]] (''Metachirus myosuros'')
*****[[Brown four-eyed opossum|Guianan brown four-eyed opossum]] (''Metachirus nudicaudatus'')
*** Tribe Didelphini [[File:Schwimmbeutler-drawing2.jpg|thumb|[[Water opossum]], ''Chironectes minimus'']]
*** Tribe Didelphini [[File:Schwimmbeutler-drawing2.jpg|thumb|[[Water opossum]], ''Chironectes minimus'']]
**** Genus ''[[Chironectes]]''
**** Genus ''[[Chironectes]]''
Line 278: Line 280:
***** [[Big lutrine opossum]] or little water opossum (''Lutreolina crassicaudata'')[[File:Cambridge Natural History Mammalia Fig 084.jpg|thumb|[[Big lutrine opossum]], ''Lutreolina crassicaudata'']]
***** [[Big lutrine opossum]] or little water opossum (''Lutreolina crassicaudata'')[[File:Cambridge Natural History Mammalia Fig 084.jpg|thumb|[[Big lutrine opossum]], ''Lutreolina crassicaudata'']]
***** †''[[Lutreolina materdei]]'' <small>Goin & De los Reyes 2011</small><ref>{{cite journal| title=Contribution to the knowledge of living representatives of the genus ''Lutreolina'' Thomas, 1910 (Mammalia, Marsupialia, Didelphidae)|jstor=20627135|first=Francisco J.|last=Goin|author2=de los Reyes, Martin |journal=[[Historia Natural]]|year=2011|volume=1|issue=2|pages=15–25}}</ref>
***** †''[[Lutreolina materdei]]'' <small>Goin & De los Reyes 2011</small><ref>{{cite journal| title=Contribution to the knowledge of living representatives of the genus ''Lutreolina'' Thomas, 1910 (Mammalia, Marsupialia, Didelphidae)|jstor=20627135|first=Francisco J.|last=Goin|author2=de los Reyes, Martin |journal=[[Historia Natural]]|year=2011|volume=1|issue=2|pages=15–25}}</ref>
***** [[Massoia's lutrine opossum]] (''Lutreolina massoia'')<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1644/13-MAMM-A-246|title= A new species of lutrine opossum, genus ''Lutreolina'' Thomas (Didelphidae), from the South American Yungas|journal= Journal of Mammalogy|volume= 95|issue= 2|pages= 225|year= 2014|last1= Martínez-Lanfranco|first1= Juan A.|last2= Flores|first2= David|last3= Jayat|first3= J. Pablo|last4= d'Elía|first4= Guillermo|s2cid= 85599660|doi-access= free}}</ref>
***** [[Massoia's lutrine opossum]] (''Lutreolina massoia'')<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1644/13-MAMM-A-246|title= A new species of lutrine opossum, genus ''Lutreolina'' Thomas (Didelphidae), from the South American Yungas|journal= Journal of Mammalogy|volume= 95|issue= 2|pages= 225|year= 2014|last1= Martínez-Lanfranco|first1= Juan A.|last2= Flores|first2= David|last3= Jayat|first3= J. Pablo|last4= d'Elía|first4= Guillermo|s2cid= 85599660|doi-access= free|hdl= 11336/29722|hdl-access= free}}</ref>
***** †''[[Lutreolina tracheia]]'' <small>Rovereto 1914</small>
***** †''[[Lutreolina tracheia]]'' <small>Rovereto 1914</small>
**** †Genus ''[[Hyperdidelphys]]'' <small>Ameghino 1904</small>
**** †Genus ''[[Hyperdidelphys]]'' <small>Ameghino 1904</small>
Line 297: Line 299:
***** [[Common four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander canus'')
***** [[Common four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander canus'')
***** [[Deltaic four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander deltae'')
***** [[Deltaic four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander deltae'')
***** [[Southeastern four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander frenatus'')<!--no longer recognized-->
***** [[Southeastern four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander frenatus'')<!--no longer recognized. Synonym of Philander nigratus-->
***** [[McIlhenny's four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander mcilhennyi'')
***** [[McIlhenny's four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander mcilhennyi'')
***** [[Dark four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander melanurus'')
***** [[Dark four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander melanurus'')
***** [[Mondolfi's four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander mondolfii'')
***** [[Mondolfi's four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander mondolfii'') <!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Philander canus -->
***** [[Black four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander nigratus'')
***** [[Black four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander nigratus'')
***** [[Olrog's four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander olrogi'')<!--no longer recognized-->
***** [[Olrog's four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander olrogi'')<!--No longer recognized. Synonym of Philander canus -->
***** [[Gray four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander opossum'')
***** [[Gray four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander opossum'')
***** [[Pebas four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander pebas'')
***** [[Pebas four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander pebas'')
***** [[Southern four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander quica'')
***** [[Northern four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander vossi'')
***** [[Northern four-eyed opossum]] (''Philander vossi'')
**** †Genus ''[[Thylophorops]]'' <small>Reig 1952</small>
**** †Genus ''[[Thylophorops]]'' <small>Reig 1952</small>
Line 315: Line 318:
**** Genus ''[[Marmosa]]''
**** Genus ''[[Marmosa]]''
***** †''Marmosa contrerasi'' <small>Mones 1980</small>
***** †''Marmosa contrerasi'' <small>Mones 1980</small>
***** Subgenus ''Eomarmosa''
***** Subgenus ''Marmosa'' [[File:Marmosa robinsoni.jpg|thumb|[[Robinson's mouse opossum]], ''Marmosa robinsoni'']]
****** [[Heavy-browed mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa andersoni'')
****** [[Red mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa rubra'')
***** Subgenus ''Exulomarmosa''
****** [[Isthmian mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa isthmica'')
****** [[Isthmian mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa isthmica'')
****** [[Rufous mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa lepida'')
****** [[Mexican mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa mexicana'')
****** [[Mexican mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa mexicana'')
****** [[Linnaeus's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa murina'')
****** [[Quechuan mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa quichua'')
****** [[Robinson's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa robinsoni'')
****** [[Robinson's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa robinsoni'')
****** [[Red mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa rubra'')
****** [[Simon's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa simonsi'')
****** [[Simon's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa simonsi'')
****** [[Tyler's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa tyleriana'')
****** [[Waterhouse's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa waterhousei'')
****** [[Guajira mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa xerophila'')
****** [[Guajira mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa xerophila'')
****** [[Zeledon's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa zeledoni'')
****** [[Zeledon's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa zeledoni'')
****** [[Adler’s mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa adleri)''
***** Subgenus ''Marmosa'' [[File:Marmosa robinsoni.jpg|thumb|[[Robinson's mouse opossum]], ''Marmosa robinsoni'']]
****** [[Quechuan mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa macrotarsus'')
****** [[Linnaeus's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa murina'')
****** [[Tyler's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa tyleriana'')
****** [[Waterhouse's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa waterhousei'')
***** Subgenus ''Micoureus'' [[File:Cuíca - Marmosa paraguayana cropped.jpg|thumb|[[Tate's woolly mouse opossum]], ''Marmosa paraguayanus'']]
***** Subgenus ''Micoureus'' [[File:Cuíca - Marmosa paraguayana cropped.jpg|thumb|[[Tate's woolly mouse opossum]], ''Marmosa paraguayanus'']]
****** [[Adler's mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa adleri)''
****** [[Alston's mouse opossum|Alston's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa alstoni'')
****** [[Alston's mouse opossum|Alston's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa alstoni'')
****** [[White-bellied woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa constantiae'')
****** [[White-bellied woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa constantiae'')
Line 337: Line 340:
****** [[Jansa's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa jansae'')
****** [[Jansa's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa jansae'')
******†''[[Marmosa laventica]]'' <small>Marshall 1976</small><ref name="goin">{{cite book|last1=Goin|first1=Francisco J.|title=Vertebrate Paleontology of the Miocene in Colombia. A History of the Neotropical Fauna|publisher=Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press|year=1997|isbn=978-1-56098-418-4|pages=185–204|chapter=New clues for understanding Neogene marsupial radiations}}</ref>
******†''[[Marmosa laventica]]'' <small>Marshall 1976</small><ref name="goin">{{cite book|last1=Goin|first1=Francisco J.|title=Vertebrate Paleontology of the Miocene in Colombia. A History of the Neotropical Fauna|publisher=Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press|year=1997|isbn=978-1-56098-418-4|pages=185–204|chapter=New clues for understanding Neogene marsupial radiations}}</ref>
****** [[Brazilian woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa limae'')
****** [[Brazilian woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa limae'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Marmosa demerarae -->
****** [[Merida woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa meridae'')
****** [[Merida woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa meridae'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Marmosa demerarae -->
****** [[Tate's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa paraguayanus'')
****** [[Nicaraguan woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa nicaraguae'')
****** [[Tate's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa paraguayana'')
****** [[Peruvian woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa parda'')
****** [[Peruvian woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa parda'')
****** [[Anthony's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa perplexa'')
****** [[Anthony's woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa perplexa'')
****** [[Little woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa phaeus'')
****** [[Little woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa phaea'')
****** [[Bolivian woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa rapposa'')
****** [[Bolivian woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa rapposa'')
****** [[Bare-tailed woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa rutteri'')
****** [[Bare-tailed woolly mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa rutteri'')
***** Subgenus ''Stegomarmosa''
****** [[Heavy-browed mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa andersoni'')
****** [[Rufous mouse opossum]] (''Marmosa lepida'')
**** Genus ''[[Monodelphis]]'' [[File:Monodelphis dimidiata.jpg|thumb|[[Yellow-sided opossum]], ''Monodelphis dimidiata'']][[File:Monodelphis domestica93-300b.jpg|thumb|[[Gray short-tailed opossum]], ''Monodelphis domestica'']]
**** Genus ''[[Monodelphis]]'' [[File:Monodelphis dimidiata.jpg|thumb|[[Yellow-sided opossum]], ''Monodelphis dimidiata'']][[File:Monodelphis domestica93-300b.jpg|thumb|[[Gray short-tailed opossum]], ''Monodelphis domestica'']]
***** Subgenus ''Microdelphys''
***** [[Sepia short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis adusta'')
***** [[Northern three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis americana'')
****** [[Northern three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis americana'')
****** [[Gardner's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis gardneri'')
***** [[Arlindo's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis arlindoi'')<ref name="wiley1">{{cite journal|doi=10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00791.x |title=Species diversity in the ''Monodelphis brevicaudata'' complex (Didelphimorphia: Didelphidae) inferred from molecular and morphological data, with the description of a new species|year=2012|last1=Pavan|first1=Silvia Eliza|last2=Rossi|first2=Rogerio Vieira|last3=Schneider|first3=Horacio|journal=Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society|volume=165|pages=190–223|doi-access=free}}</ref>
***** [[Northern red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis brevicaudata'')
****** [[Ihering's three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis iheringi'')
***** [[Yellow-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis dimidiata'')
****** [[Chestnut-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis rubida'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Monodelphis americana -->
***** [[Gray short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis domestica'')
****** [[Long-nosed short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis scalops'')
***** [[Emilia's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis emiliae'')
****** [[Southern three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis theresa'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Monodelphis scalops -->
***** [[Amazonian red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis glirina'')
****** [[Red three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis umbristriata'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Monodelphis americana -->
***** Subgenus ''Monodelphiops''
***** [[Handley's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis handleyi'')<ref>Solari, S. (2016). ''Monodelphis handleyi''. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species {{doi|10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T199833A22171921.en}}</ref>
***** [[Ihering's three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis iheringi'')
****** [[Yellow-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis dimidiata'')
***** [[Pygmy short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis kunsi'')
****** [[Southern red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis sorex'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Monodelphis dimidiata -->
***** [[Marajó short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis maraxina'')
****** [[One-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis unistriata'')
***** [[Osgood's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis osgoodi'')
***** Subgenus ''Monodelphis''
****** [[Arlindo's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis arlindoi'')<ref name="wiley1">{{cite journal |last1=Pavan |first1=Silvia Eliza |last2=Rossi |first2=Rogerio Vieira |last3=Schneider |first3=Horacio |year=2012 |title=Species diversity in the ''Monodelphis brevicaudata'' complex (Didelphimorphia: Didelphidae) inferred from molecular and morphological data, with the description of a new species |journal=Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society |volume=165 |pages=190–223 |doi=10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00791.x |doi-access=free}}</ref>
***** [[Peruvian short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis peruviana'')
***** [[Hooded red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis palliolata'')
****** [[Northern red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis brevicaudata'')
***** [[Monodelphis pinocchio|Long-nosed short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis pinocchio'')
****** [[Gray short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis domestica'')
***** [[Reig's opossum]] ''(Monodelphis reigi)''
****** [[Amazonian red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis glirina'')
***** [[Ronald's opossum]] (''Monodelphis ronaldi'')
****** [[Marajó short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis maraxina'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Monodelphis glirina -->
***** [[Chestnut-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis rubida'')
****** [[Hooded red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis palliolata'')
****** [[Santa Rosa short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis sanctaerosae'')<ref name=":0">{{cite journal |last1=Voss |first1=Robert S. |last2=Pine |first2=Ronald H. |last3=Solari |first3=Sergio |year=2012 |title=A New Species of the Didelphid Marsupial Genus ''Monodelphis'' from Eastern Bolivia |url=https://zenodo.org/record/5360285 |journal=American Museum Novitates |issue=3740 |pages=1–14 |doi=10.1206/3740.2 |s2cid=83545414}}</ref>
***** [[Saci short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis saci'')
****** [[Touan short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis touan'')<ref name="wiley1" />
***** [[Santa Rosa short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis sanctaerosae'')<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1206/3740.2 |title=A New Species of the Didelphid Marsupial Genus ''Monodelphis'' from Eastern Bolivia|year=2012|last1=Voss|first1=Robert S.|last2=Pine|first2=Ronald H.|last3=Solari|first3=Sergio|journal=American Museum Novitates|issue=3740|pages=1–14|s2cid=83545414|url=https://zenodo.org/record/5360285 }}</ref>
***** [[Long-nosed short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis scalops'')
****** [[Voss's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis vossi'')
***** Subgenus ''Mygalodelphys''
***** [[Southern red-sided opossum]] (''Monodelphis sorex'')
***** [[Southern three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis theresa'')
****** [[Sepia short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis adusta'')<ref name="wiley1" />
***** [[Touan short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis touan'')<ref name="wiley1" />
****** [[Handley's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis handleyi'')<ref>Solari, S. (2016). ''Monodelphis handleyi''. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species {{doi|10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T199833A22171921.en}}</ref>
***** [[Red three-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis umbristriata'')
****** [[Pygmy short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis kunsi'')
***** [[One-striped opossum]] (''Monodelphis unistriata'')
****** [[Osgood's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis osgoodi'')
***** [[Voss's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis vossi'')
****** [[Peruvian short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis peruviana'')
****** [[Monodelphis pinocchio|Long-nosed short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis pinocchio'')
****** [[Reig's opossum]] ''(Monodelphis reigi)''
****** [[Ronald's opossum]] (''Monodelphis ronaldi'')
****** [[Saci short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis saci'')<ref name=":0" />
***** Subgenus ''Pyrodelphys''
****** [[Emilia's short-tailed opossum]] (''Monodelphis emiliae'')
**** Genus †''[[Sparassocynus]]'' <small>Mercerat 1898</small><ref name =BeckTaglioretti>{{cite journal |last1=Beck |first1=Robin M. D. |last2=Taglioretti |first2=Matias L. |title=A Nearly Complete Juvenile Skull of the Marsupial ''Sparassocynus derivatus'' from the Pliocene of Argentina, the Affinities of "Sparassocynids", and the Diversification of Opossums (Marsupialia; Didelphimorphia; Didelphidae) |journal=Journal of Mammalian Evolution |date=2019 |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=385–417 |doi=10.1007/s10914-019-09471-y|s2cid=198190603 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
**** Genus †''[[Sparassocynus]]'' <small>Mercerat 1898</small><ref name =BeckTaglioretti>{{cite journal |last1=Beck |first1=Robin M. D. |last2=Taglioretti |first2=Matias L. |title=A Nearly Complete Juvenile Skull of the Marsupial ''Sparassocynus derivatus'' from the Pliocene of Argentina, the Affinities of "Sparassocynids", and the Diversification of Opossums (Marsupialia; Didelphimorphia; Didelphidae) |journal=Journal of Mammalian Evolution |date=2019 |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=385–417 |doi=10.1007/s10914-019-09471-y|s2cid=198190603 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
***** †''[[Sparassocynus bahiai]]'' <small>Mercerat 1898</small>
***** †''[[Sparassocynus bahiai]]'' <small>Mercerat 1898</small>
Line 383: Line 396:
***** †''[[Thylatheridium hudsoni]]'' <small>Goin & Montalvo 1988</small>
***** †''[[Thylatheridium hudsoni]]'' <small>Goin & Montalvo 1988</small>
***** †''[[Thylatheridium pascuali]]'' <small>Reig 1958</small>
***** †''[[Thylatheridium pascuali]]'' <small>Reig 1958</small>
**** Genus ''[[Tlacuatzin]]''<ref name="VossJansa2009">{{cite journal |last=Voss |first=Robert S. |author2=Jansa, Sharon A. |year=2009 |title=Phylogenetic relationships and classification of didelphid marsupials, an extant radiation of New World metatherian mammals |journal=[[Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History]] |volume=322 |pages=1–177 |doi=10.1206/322.1 |s2cid=85017821 |hdl-access=free |hdl=2246/5975}}</ref>
**** Genus ''[[Tlacuatzin]]''<ref name=VossJansa2009/>
***** [[Balsas gray mouse opossum]] (''Tlacuatzin balsasensis'')
***** [[Balsas gray mouse opossum]] (''Tlacuatzin balsasensis'')
***** [[Grayish mouse opossum|Tehuantepec gray mouse opossum]] (''Tlacuatzin canescens'')
***** [[Grayish mouse opossum|Tehuantepec gray mouse opossum]] (''Tlacuatzin canescens'')
Line 399: Line 412:
***** [[Chacoan gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus chacoensis'')
***** [[Chacoan gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus chacoensis'')
***** [[Guahiba gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus guahybae'')
***** [[Guahiba gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus guahybae'')
***** †[[Red-bellied gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus ignitus'')<!--no longer recognized-->
***** †[[Red-bellied gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus ignitus'')<!--No longer recognized. Synonym of Cryptonanus chacoensis-->
***** [[Unduavi gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus unduaviensis'')
***** [[Unduavi gracile opossum]] (''Cryptonanus unduaviensis'')
**** Genus ''[[Gracilinanus]]''
**** Genus ''[[Gracilinanus]]''
Line 413: Line 426:
***** †''Lestodelphys juga'' <small>(Ameghino 1889)</small>
***** †''Lestodelphys juga'' <small>(Ameghino 1889)</small>
**** Genus ''[[Marmosops]]'' [[File:Marmosops incanus.jpg|thumb|[[Gray slender opossum]], ''Marmosops incanus'']]
**** Genus ''[[Marmosops]]'' [[File:Marmosops incanus.jpg|thumb|[[Gray slender opossum]], ''Marmosops incanus'']]
***** [[Bishop's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops bishopi'')
***** Subgenus ''Marmosops''
***** [[Carr's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops carri'')
****** [[Andean slender mouse opossum]] (''Marmosops caucae'')
***** [[Cordillera slender opossum]] (''Marmosops chucha'')
****** [[Creighton's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops creightoni'')
***** [[Narrow-headed slender opossum]] (''Marmosops cracens'')<!--no longer recognized-->
****** [[Dorothy's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops dorothea'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Marmosops noctivagus -->
***** [[Creighton's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops creightoni'')
****** [[Tschudi's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops impavidus'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Marmosops caucae -->
***** [[Dorothy's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops dorothea'')
****** [[Gray slender opossum]] (''Marmosops incanus'')
***** [[Dusky slender opossum]] (''Marmosops fuscatus'')
****** [[Neblina slender opossum]] (''Marmosops neblina'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Marmosops caucae -->
***** [[Handley's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops handleyi'')
****** [[White-bellied slender opossum]] (''Marmosops noctivagus'')
***** [[Tschudi's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops impavidus'')<!--no longer recognized-->
****** [[Spectacled slender opossum]] (''Marmosops ocellatus'')
***** [[Gray slender opossum]] (''Marmosops incanus'')
****** [[Brazilian slender opossum]] (''Marmosops paulensis'')
***** [[Panama slender opossum]] (''Marmosops invictus'')
****** [[Soini's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops soinii'')
***** Subgenus ''Sciophanes''
***** [[Junin slender opossum]] (''Marmosops juninensis'')
***** [[Río Magdalena slender opossum]] (''Marmosops magdalena'')
****** [[Bishop's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops bishopi'')
***** [[Silva's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops marina'')
****** [[Carr's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops carri'')
***** [[Neblina slender opossum]] (''Marmosops neblina'')<!--no longer recognized-->
****** [[Cordillera slender opossum]] (''Marmosops chucha'')
***** [[White-bellied slender opossum]] (''Marmosops noctivagus'')
****** [[Narrow-headed slender opossum]] (''Marmosops cracens'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Marmosops fuscatus -->
***** [[Ojasti's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops ojastii'')
****** [[Dusky slender opossum]] (''Marmosops fuscatus'')
***** [[Pantepui slender opossum]] (''Marmosops pakaraimae'')
****** [[Handley's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops handleyi'')
***** [[Delicate slender opossum]] (''Marmosops parvidens'')
****** [[Panama slender opossum]] (''Marmosops invictus'')
***** [[Brazilian slender opossum]] (''Marmosops paulensis'')
****** [[Junin slender opossum]] (''Marmosops juninensis'')
***** [[Pinheiro's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops pinheiroi'')
****** [[Río Magdalena slender opossum]] (''Marmosops magdalenae'')
*****[[Soini's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops soinii'')
****** [[Silva's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops marina'')
*****[[Woodall's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops woodalli'')
****** [[Ojasti's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops ojastii'')
****** [[Pantepui slender opossum]] (''Marmosops pakaraimae'')
****** [[Delicate slender opossum]] (''Marmosops parvidens'')
****** [[Pinheiro's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops pinheiroi'')
****** [[Woodall's slender opossum]] (''Marmosops woodalli'')
**** Genus ''[[Thylamys]]'' <!--[https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=sp&u=[[:es:Thylamys]] translation of Spanish article]--> [[File:Llaca.jpg|thumb|[[Elegant fat-tailed mouse opossum]], ''Thylamys elegans'']]
**** Genus ''[[Thylamys]]'' <!--[https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=sp&u=[[:es:Thylamys]] translation of Spanish article]--> [[File:Llaca.jpg|thumb|[[Elegant fat-tailed mouse opossum]], ''Thylamys elegans'']]
***** Subgenus ''Thylamys''
****** [[Cinderella fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys cinderella'')<!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Thylamys venustus -->
****** [[Mesopotamian fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys citellus'')<ref>Flores, D. & Teta, P. (2016). ''Thylamys citellus''. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species {{doi|10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T199835A22172943.en}}</ref><!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Thylamys pusillus -->
****** [[Elegant fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys elegans'')
****** [[Paraguayan fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys macrurus'')
****** [[White-bellied fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys pallidior'')
****** [[Dry Chaco fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys pulchellus'')<ref>Flores, D. & Teta, P. (2016). ''Thylamys pulchellus''. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species {{doi|10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T199834A22172571.en}}</ref><!-- No longer recognized. Synonym of Thylamys pusillus -->
****** [[Common fat-tailed mouse opossum|Chacoan fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys pusillus'')
****** [[Argentine fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys sponsorius'')
****** [[Tate's fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys tatei'')
****** [[Buff-bellied fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys venustus'')
***** Subgenus ''Xerodelpys''
****** [[Karimi's fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys karimii'')
****** [[Dwarf fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys velutinus'')
***** †''[[Thylamys colombianus]]'' <small>Goin 1997</small><ref name="goin" />
***** †''[[Thylamys colombianus]]'' <small>Goin 1997</small><ref name="goin" />
***** [[Cinderella fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys cinderella'')<!--no longer recognized-->
***** [[Mesopotamian fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys citellus'')<ref>Flores, D. & Teta, P. (2016). ''Thylamys citellus''. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species {{doi|10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T199835A22172943.en}}</ref>
***** [[Elegant fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys elegans'')
***** [[Karimi's fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys karimii'')
***** [[Paraguayan fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys macrurus'')
***** †''[[Thylamys minutus]]'' <small>Goin 1997</small><ref name="goin" />
***** †''[[Thylamys minutus]]'' <small>Goin 1997</small><ref name="goin" />
***** †''[[Thylamys pinei]]'' <small>Goin, Montalvo & Visconti 2000</small><ref>{{cite journal|title=Los marsupiales (Mammalia) del Mioceno Superior de la Formacion Cerro Azul (Provincia de La Pampa, Argentina) |first1=Francisco J. |last1=Goin |author2=Montalvo, C.I. |author3=Visconti, G. |journal=[[Estudios Geológicos]]|year=2000|volume=56|issue=1–2 |pages=101–126|doi=10.3989/egeol.00561-2158|doi-access=free |hdl=11336/108700 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>
***** [[White-bellied fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys pallidior'')
***** [[Dry Chaco fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys pulchellus'')<ref>Flores, D. & Teta, P. (2016). ''Thylamys pulchellus''. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species {{doi|10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T199834A22172571.en}}</ref>
***** †''[[Thylamys pinei]]'' <small>Goin, Montalvo & Visconti 2000</small><ref>{{cite journal|title=Los marsupiales (Mammalia) del Mioceno Superior de la Formacion Cerro Azul (Provincia de La Pampa, Argentina) |first1=Francisco J. |last1=Goin |author2=Montalvo, C.I. |author3=Visconti, G. |journal=[[Estudios Geológicos]]|year=2000|volume=56|issue=1–2 |pages=101–126|doi=10.3989/egeol.00561-2158|doi-access=free }}</ref>
***** [[Common fat-tailed mouse opossum|Chacoan fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys pusillus'')
***** [[Argentine fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys sponsorius'')
***** [[Tate's fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys tatei'')
***** [[Dwarf fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys velutinus'')
***** [[Buff-bellied fat-tailed mouse opossum]] (''Thylamys venustus'')
***** †''[[Thylamys zettii]]'' <small>Goin 1997</small><ref>{{cite journal|title=''Thylamys zettii'', nueva especie de marmosino (Marsupialia, Didelphidae) del Cenozoico tardio de la region Pampeana|first=Francisco J.|last=Goin|journal=[[Ameghiniana]]|year=1997|volume=34|issue=4|pages=481–484}}</ref>
***** †''[[Thylamys zettii]]'' <small>Goin 1997</small><ref>{{cite journal|title=''Thylamys zettii'', nueva especie de marmosino (Marsupialia, Didelphidae) del Cenozoico tardio de la region Pampeana|first=Francisco J.|last=Goin|journal=[[Ameghiniana]]|year=1997|volume=34|issue=4|pages=481–484}}</ref>



Revision as of 02:33, 25 April 2024

Didelphidae[2]
Temporal range: Early Miocene – Recent [1]
Virginia opossum, Didelphis virginiana, the only U.S. and Canadian species (mother with nine young)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Superorder: Ameridelphia
Order: Didelphimorphia
Gill, 1872
Family: Didelphidae
J. E. Gray, 1821
Type genus
Didelphis
Linnaeus, 1758
Genera

Several; see text

Diversity
126 species

Opossums (/əˈpɒsəm/) are members of the marsupial order Didelphimorphia (/dˌdɛlfɪˈmɔːrfiə/) endemic to the Americas. The largest order of marsupials in the Western Hemisphere, it comprises 126 species in 18 genera. Opossums originated in South America and entered North America in the Great American Interchange following the connection of North and South America.

The Virginia opossum is the only species found in the United States and Canada. It is often simply referred to as an opossum, and in North America it is commonly referred to as a possum[3] (/ˈpɒsəm/; sometimes rendered as 'possum in written form to indicate the dropped "o"). Opossums should not be confused with the Australasian arboreal marsupials of suborder Phalangeriformes that are also called possums because of their resemblance to the Didelphimorphia. The opossum is typically a nonaggressive animal and almost never carries the virus for rabies.[4]

Etymology

The word opossum is derived from the Powhatan language and was first recorded between 1607 and 1611 by John Smith (as opassom) and William Strachey (as aposoum).[5] Siebert reconstructs the word phonemically as /a·passem/.[6] Possum was first recorded in 1613. Both men encountered the language at the English settlement of Jamestown, Virginia, which Smith helped to found and where Strachey later served as its first secretary.[7] Strachey's notes describe the opossum as a "beast in bigness of a pig and in taste alike," while Smith recorded it "hath an head like a swine ... tail like a rat ... of the bigness of a cat."[7] The Powhatan word ultimately derives from a Proto-Algonquian word (*wa·p-aʔθemwa) meaning "white dog or dog-like beast."[7]

Following the arrival of Europeans in Australia, the term possum was borrowed to describe distantly related Australian marsupials of the suborder Phalangeriformes,[8] which are more closely related to other Australian marsupials such as kangaroos.

They similarly have didelphimorphia, two (di) wombs (delphus), the second being a non-bilateral marsupial womb (nursing-pouch).[9]

Evolution

Opossums are frequently considered to be "living fossils",[10] and as a result are often used to approximate the ancestral therian condition in comparative studies.[10][11] However, this is inaccurate, as the oldest opossum fossils are from the early Miocene (roughly 20 million years old).[12] The last common ancestor of all living opossums dates approximately to the Oligocene-Miocene boundary (23 million years ago) and is at most no older than Oligocene in age.[13][14] Many extinct metatherians once considered early opossums, such as Alphadon, Peradectes, Herpetotherium, and Pucadelphys, have since been recognized to have been previously grouped with opossums on the basis of plesiomorphies and are now considered to represent older branches of Metatheria only distantly related to modern opossums.

Opossums probably originated in the Amazonia region of northern South America, where they began their initial diversification.[15] They were minor components of South American mammal faunas until the late Miocene, when they began to diversify rapidly.[13] Prior to this time the ecological niches presently occupied by opossums were occupied by other groups of metatherians such as paucituberculatans[16] and sparassodonts[14][17][18] Large opossums like Didelphis show a pattern of gradually increasing in size over geologic time as sparassodont diversity declined.[17][18] Several groups of opossums, including Thylophorops, Thylatheridium, Hyperdidelphys, and sparassocynids developed carnivorous adaptations during the late Miocene-Pliocene, prior to the arrival of carnivorans in South America. Most of these groups with the exception of Lutreolina are now extinct.[19] It has been suggested that the size and shape of the jaw of the ancestral Didelphid would most closely match that of the modern Marmosa genus.[20]

Characteristics

Skeleton of the gray short-tailed opossum (Monodelphis domestica)

Didelphimorphs are small to medium-sized marsupials that grow to the size of a house cat. They tend to be semi-arboreal omnivores, although there are many exceptions. Most members of this order have long snouts, a narrow braincase, and a prominent sagittal crest. The dental formula is: 5.1.3.44.1.3.4 × 2 = 50 teeth. By mammalian standards, this is an unusually full jaw. The incisors are very small, the canines large, and the molars are tricuspid.

Didelphimorphs have a plantigrade stance (feet flat on the ground) and the hind feet have an opposable digit with no claw. Like some New World monkeys, some opossums have prehensile tails. Like most marsupials, many females have a pouch. The tail and parts of the feet bear scutes. The stomach is simple, with a small cecum.[10] Like most marsupials, the male opossum has a forked penis bearing twin glandes.[21][22][10]

Although all living opossums are essentially opportunistic omnivores, different species vary in the amount of meat and vegetation they include in their diet. Members of the Caluromyinae are essentially frugivorous; whereas the lutrine opossum and Patagonian opossum primarily feed on other animals.[23] The water opossum or yapok (Chironectes minimus) is particularly unusual, as it is the only living semi-aquatic marsupial, using its webbed hindlimbs to dive in search of freshwater mollusks and crayfish.[24] The extinct Thylophorops, the largest known opossum at 4–7 kg (8.8–15.4 lb), was a macropredator.[25][26][27] Most opossums are scansorial, well-adapted to life in the trees or on the ground, but members of the Caluromyinae and Glironiinae are primarily arboreal, whereas species of Metachirus, Monodelphis, and to a lesser degree Didelphis show adaptations for life on the ground.[28] Metachirus nudicaudatus, found in the upper Amazon basin, consumes fruit seeds, small vertebrate creatures like birds and reptiles and invertebrates like crayfish and snails, but seems to be mainly insectivorous.[29]

An opossum on top of a fence

Reproduction and life cycle

As marsupials, female opossums have a reproductive system that includes a bifurcated vagina and a divided uterus; many have a marsupium, the pouch.[30] The average estrous cycle of the Virginia opossum is about 28 days.[31] Opossums do possess a placenta,[32] but it is short-lived, simple in structure, and, unlike that of placental mammals, not fully functional.[33] The young are therefore born at a very early stage, although the gestation period is similar to that of many other small marsupials, at only 12 to 14 days.[34] They give birth to litters of up to 20 young.[35] Once born, the offspring must find their way into the marsupium, if present, to hold on to and nurse from a teat. Baby opossums, like their Australian cousins, are called joeys.[36] Female opossums often give birth to very large numbers of young, most of which fail to attach to a teat, although as many as thirteen young can attach,[37] and therefore survive, depending on species. The young are weaned between 70 and 125 days, when they detach from the teat and leave the pouch. The opossum lifespan is unusually short for a mammal of its size, usually only one to two years in the wild and as long as four or more years in captivity. Senescence is rapid.[38]

Opossums are moderately sexually dimorphic with males usually being larger, heavier, and having larger canines than females.[37] The largest difference between the opossum and non-marsupial mammals is the bifurcated penis of the male and bifurcated vagina of the female (the source of the term didelphimorph, from the Greek didelphys, meaning "double-wombed").[39] Opossum spermatozoa exhibit sperm-pairing, forming conjugate pairs in the epididymis. This may ensure that flagella movement can be accurately coordinated for maximal motility. Conjugate pairs dissociate into separate spermatozoa before fertilization.[40]

Behavior

Virginia opossum feigning death, or "playing possum"

Opossums are usually solitary and nomadic, staying in one area as long as food and water are easily available. Some families will group together in ready-made burrows or even under houses. Though they will temporarily occupy abandoned burrows, they do not dig or put much effort into building their own. As nocturnal animals, they favor dark, secure areas. These areas may be below ground or above.[41][42]

Juvenile Virginia opossum hissing defensively

When threatened or harmed, they will "play possum", mimicking the appearance and smell of a sick or dead animal. This physiological response is involuntary (like fainting), rather than a conscious act. In the case of baby opossums, however, the brain does not always react this way at the appropriate moment, and therefore they often fail to "play dead" when threatened. When an opossum is "playing possum", the animal's lips are drawn back, the teeth are bared, saliva foams around the mouth, the eyes close or half-close, and a foul-smelling fluid is secreted from the anal glands. The stiff, curled form can be prodded, turned over, and even carried away without reaction. The animal will typically regain consciousness after a period of a few minutes to four hours, a process that begins with a slight twitching of the ears.[43]

Some species of opossums have prehensile tails, although dangling by the tail is more common among juveniles. An opossum may also use its tail as a brace and a fifth limb when climbing. The tail is occasionally used as a grip to carry bunches of leaves or bedding materials to the nest.[44] A mother will sometimes carry her young upon her back, where they will cling tightly even when she is climbing or running.

Threatened opossums (especially males) will growl deeply, raising their pitch as the threat becomes more urgent. Males make a clicking "smack" noise out of the side of their mouths as they wander in search of a mate, and females will sometimes repeat the sound in return. When separated or distressed, baby opossums will make a sneezing noise to signal their mother. The mother in return makes a clicking sound and waits for the baby to find her. If threatened, the baby will open its mouth and quietly hiss until the threat is gone.[45]

Diet

Opossums eat insects, rodents, birds, eggs, frogs, plants, fruits and grain. Some species may eat the skeletal remains of rodents and roadkill animals to fulfill their calcium requirements.[46] In captivity, they will also eat dog food, cat food, and human food waste.

Many large opossums (Didelphini) are immune to the venom of rattlesnakes and pit vipers (Crotalinae) and regularly prey upon these snakes.[47] This adaptation seems to be unique to the Didelphini, as their closest relative, the brown four-eyed opossum, is not immune to snake venom.[48] Similar adaptations are seen in other small predatory mammals such as mongooses and hedgehogs. Didelphin opossums and crotaline vipers have been suggested to be in an evolutionary arms race. Some authors have suggested that this adaptation originally arose as a defense mechanism, allowing a rare reversal of an evolutionary arms race where the former prey has become the predator,[49] whereas others have suggested it arose as a predatory adaptation given that it also occurs in other predatory mammals and does not occur in opossums that do not regularly eat other vertebrates.[16] The fer-de-lance, one of the most venomous snakes in the New World, may have developed its highly potent venom as a means to prey on or a defense mechanism against large opossums.[49]

Habitat

D. virginiana range, including introductions in the west. These areas expanded northwards (e.g., into Wisconsin and Minnesota).[50]

Opossums are found in North, Central, and South America. The Virginia opossum lives in regions as far north as Canada and as far south as Central America, while other types of opossums only inhabit countries south of the United States.[51] The Virginia opossum can often be found in wooded areas, though its habitat may vary widely.[52] Opossums are generally found in areas like forests, shrubland, mangrove swamps, rainforests and eucalyptus forests.[53] Opossums have been found moving northward.[50][54]

Hunting and foodways

The Virginia opossum was once widely hunted and consumed in the United States.[55][56][57][58] Opossum farms have been operated in the United States in the past.[59][60][61] Sweet potatoes were eaten together with the opossum in the American South.[62][63] In 1909, a "Possum and 'Taters" banquet was held in Atlanta to honor President-elect William Howard Taft.[64][65] South Carolina cuisine includes opossum,[66] and President Jimmy Carter hunted opossums[67][68] in addition to other small game.[69][70] Raccoon, opossum, partridges, prairie hen and frogs were among the fare Mark Twain recorded as part of American cookery.[71]

In Dominica, Grenada, Trinidad, Saint Lucia and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, the common opossum or manicou is popular and can only be hunted during certain times of the year owing to overhunting.[72] The meat is traditionally prepared by smoking, then stewing. It is light and fine-grained, but the musk glands must be removed as part of preparation. The meat can be used in place of rabbit and chicken in recipes. Historically, hunters in the Caribbean would place a barrel with fresh or rotten fruit to attract opossums that would feed on the fruit or insects.

In northern/central Mexico, opossums are known as tlacuache or tlacuatzin. Their tails are eaten as a folk remedy to improve fertility.[73] In the Yucatán peninsula they are known in the Yucatec Mayan language as "och"[74] and they are not considered part of the regular diet by Mayan people, but still considered edible in times of famine.

Opossum oil (possum grease) is high in essential fatty acids and has been used as a chest rub and a carrier for arthritis remedies given as salves.[75][76][77]

Opossum pelts have long been part of the fur trade.

Classification

Cladogram by Upham et al. 2019[78][79]
Cladogram by Álvarez-Carretero et al. 2022[80][81]

Classification based on Voss (2022), species based on the American Society of Mammalogists (2023)[82][83][84]

See also

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