Tayassu pecari is widely distributed across the Neotropical region, from northern Argentina to south-eastern Mexico. However, its fossil record is scarce; it is recorded since the middle Pleistocene to Holocene in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay. This paper aims to: (1) update the systematic synonymy of this species; (2) review and update its geographic chronologic distribution and provide a new Lujanian record of Tayassu pecari in Buenos Aires Province and (3) discuss the paleoenvironmental and paleobiogeographical implications of this record. Considering the quantitative analysis performed, the fossil here recorded clearly integrates the group of Tayassu pecari. This specimen corresponds to the first record of Tayassu pecari in the central-...
The record of Guloninae presents mainly a Holarctic distribution, with only Eira barbara occurring i...
The Pampean Region contains sedimentary sequences with abundant mammal fossil records, which constit...
The species Selenogonus narinoensis was described by Stirton (1947) based on a single specimen which...
Catagonus wagneri has the most restricted geographical distribution among extant Tayassuidae and inh...
The Tayassuidae is one of the first families of North American immigrant mammals that arrived into S...
The oldest fossil record of Tayassuidae in South America dates of the middle Pliocene (Buenos Aires,...
The Tayassuidae has a wide geographic distribution and stratigraphie record during the Quaternary of...
Se da a conocer el primer registro fósil de Tayassu pecari (Link) en la Argentina, consistente en pr...
Tayassuidae represent one of the first mammalian immigrants that entered South America during the “G...
Leopardus is a genus that, despite currently being widely distributed in South America, shows until ...
During fieldwork carried out in January 2009 at Aurora do Tocantins (Tocantins State, northern Brazi...
Among the several fossils of South American tayassuids, it is remarkable the presence of a well-pres...
New records of Catagonus stenocephalus and Tayassu pecari are reported from the karst of Serra da Bo...
This study provides the first record of Platygonus in Uruguay (Raigón? Formation, Pliocene–early Ple...
Os Tayassuidae (Mammalia, Cetartiodactyla) foram um dos primeiros taxa a chegar e se estabelecer na ...
The record of Guloninae presents mainly a Holarctic distribution, with only Eira barbara occurring i...
The Pampean Region contains sedimentary sequences with abundant mammal fossil records, which constit...
The species Selenogonus narinoensis was described by Stirton (1947) based on a single specimen which...
Catagonus wagneri has the most restricted geographical distribution among extant Tayassuidae and inh...
The Tayassuidae is one of the first families of North American immigrant mammals that arrived into S...
The oldest fossil record of Tayassuidae in South America dates of the middle Pliocene (Buenos Aires,...
The Tayassuidae has a wide geographic distribution and stratigraphie record during the Quaternary of...
Se da a conocer el primer registro fósil de Tayassu pecari (Link) en la Argentina, consistente en pr...
Tayassuidae represent one of the first mammalian immigrants that entered South America during the “G...
Leopardus is a genus that, despite currently being widely distributed in South America, shows until ...
During fieldwork carried out in January 2009 at Aurora do Tocantins (Tocantins State, northern Brazi...
Among the several fossils of South American tayassuids, it is remarkable the presence of a well-pres...
New records of Catagonus stenocephalus and Tayassu pecari are reported from the karst of Serra da Bo...
This study provides the first record of Platygonus in Uruguay (Raigón? Formation, Pliocene–early Ple...
Os Tayassuidae (Mammalia, Cetartiodactyla) foram um dos primeiros taxa a chegar e se estabelecer na ...
The record of Guloninae presents mainly a Holarctic distribution, with only Eira barbara occurring i...
The Pampean Region contains sedimentary sequences with abundant mammal fossil records, which constit...
The species Selenogonus narinoensis was described by Stirton (1947) based on a single specimen which...