Brown four-eyed opossum - Metachirus nudicaudatus
( Desmarest, 1817 )

 

 

No Photo Available No Map Available Central & South America
No Photo Available No Map Available Central & South America

Subspecies:
Est. World Population:

CITES Status: NOT LISTED
IUCN Status: NOT LISTED
U.S. ESA Status: NOT LISTED

Body Length: 9 - 11 inches
Tail Length: 12 - 14 inches
Shoulder Height:
Weight: 28 - 32 ounces

Top Speed:
Jumping Ability: (Horizontal)

Life Span: 3 - 4 years in the Wild
Life Span: in Captivity

Sexual Maturity: (Females)
Sexual Maturity: (Males)
Litter Size:
Gestation Period:

Identification:
In general, M. nudicaudatus is grayish-brown in color. The back and sides are darker brown. The head has a dark band stretching from the tip of the snout over the eyes and across the base of the ear, making the face look almost black. In some individuals, this band extends past the ears. The eyes are large, rounded, and completely dark. A creamy white spot over each eye gives the animals their "four-eyed" name. The fur is short, thick, and silky. The venter (belly or abdomen) is usually white or cream. The tail is furred partially near the base. The rest of the tail, the scaly part, is multicolored--part black and part white. The length of the tail is usually around 13 inches, being longer than the body which is about 10 inches (Nowak, 1997; Redford and Eisenburg, 1992). The females are 71% lighter than the males (Hansen et al., 1999).

Habitat:
Brown four eyed opossums are both arboreal and terrestrial, but more often are found on the ground. They inhabit lowlands, heavy forests, or open brush country. They build round nests in tree branches or at times under rocks and logs (Hunsaker, 1977). The nests are made of leaves and twigs (Nowak, 1997).

Biomes: Tropical; forest, scrub forest

Range:
Metachirus nudicaudatus , brown four eyed opossums, range from Nicaragua to Paraguay and N. Argentina (Redford and Eisenburg, 1992).

Life Cycle:
Brown four eyed opossums are seasonally polyestrous, meaning that they are capable of breeding many times through out the year. In Central America, though, they are reported to breed in November. The female of this species does not have a pouch like most marsupials. Instead lateral folds of skin exist on the lower abdomen, on which the mammae are located (females with 5, 7, and 9 have all been recorded). Therefore, the young does not crawl into the pouch after birth like other marsupials. A 2 inch young was reported to be capable of standing on its own. It rode on its mother's hips or back and was fully independent 2 months later (Nowak, 1997).

Food & Hunting:
This species is mainly frugivorous. However, their diet can also include insects, bird's eggs, small vertebrates such as reptiles, and also small invertebrates (Hunsaker, 1977). In a study which examined the feces of individuals, some brown four eyed opossums were found to consume more ants, termites, cockroaches and beetles than any other food in their diet (Freitas et al., 1997).

Behaviour:
Brown four eyed opossums are completely nocturnal, hardly moving from their nests until dark. In a capture-mark-recapture study over two years, M. nudicaudatus was found to be highly mobile and exploratory. It also had a short residence time. It has been observed that when M. nudicaudatus is held in the hand it hardly makes any noise (Nowak, 1997; Gentile and Cerquiera, 1995).

Other Details:
As an insectivore, M. nudicaudatus clearly helps to keep the numbers of insects in its habitat under control (Freitas et al., 1997).

References:
Nowak, Ronald. Walker's Mammals Of The World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999
Kent H. Redford & John F. Eisenberg. Mammals of the Neotropics, Volume 2: The Southern Cone: Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 1992
Hunsaker, Don. Biology of Marsupials. New York: Academic Press, 1977

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Database Last Updated: 31 Dec 1969

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