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Un bicho que ya llevo bastante tiempo queriendo doodlear Thylophorops fue una zarigueya de gran tamaño que vivio en Sudamérica en el Plioceno, hace unos 3 a 2.5 millones de años. Su dentadura indica que era bastante carnivora, ciertamente más que la zarigueya norteamericana moderna; al parecer su modus operandi era registrar madrigueras en busca de animales mas pequeños. Tambien era mucho mayor; el especimen original de la especie mas grande pesaba unos 7 kilos, pero al parecer era un individuo joven, asi que pudo haber crecido más (hasta 9 kilos segun sugiere otro estudio).
Este animal captura mi imaginación porque en mi vecindario hay zarigueyas, y aunque casi nunca se las ve, sé que por la noche andan por ahí junto con los gatos. 7 kilos, incidentalmente, es lo que pesa mi gato mas grande, el Coronel Bombonel, considerado un monstruo gigante y mutante por los gatos de la calle, que salen en estampida cuando lo ven. Considerando eso, creo que si Thylophorops todavia existiera y anduviera en las calles por la noche, asustaria a todos los gatos y a mas de una persona.
A critter I've been meaning to doodle for a while Thylophorops was a large opossum that roamed South America during the Pliocene, about 3 to 2.5 million years ago. Its teeth indicate it was pretty carnivorous, certainly more than today's opossums- its MO may have been to register burrows eating their hapless owners. It was also much bigger than today's opossum; the original specimen of the bigger species weighed about 7 kg, but was apparently a young animal so it would've grown further (up to 9 kgs as suggested in a recent study).
This animal captures my imagination because we have opossums where I live, and even tho you almost never see them, at night they come out and look for food along with feral cats.
Incidentally, 7 kg is the weight of my biggest cat, Colonel Bombonel, widely considered a giant abomination by the feral cats, who stampede away whenever they see him. All things considered I think if Thylophorops was still alive and roaming the streets, it'd scare all the cats and more than one human, too
Este animal captura mi imaginación porque en mi vecindario hay zarigueyas, y aunque casi nunca se las ve, sé que por la noche andan por ahí junto con los gatos. 7 kilos, incidentalmente, es lo que pesa mi gato mas grande, el Coronel Bombonel, considerado un monstruo gigante y mutante por los gatos de la calle, que salen en estampida cuando lo ven. Considerando eso, creo que si Thylophorops todavia existiera y anduviera en las calles por la noche, asustaria a todos los gatos y a mas de una persona.
A critter I've been meaning to doodle for a while Thylophorops was a large opossum that roamed South America during the Pliocene, about 3 to 2.5 million years ago. Its teeth indicate it was pretty carnivorous, certainly more than today's opossums- its MO may have been to register burrows eating their hapless owners. It was also much bigger than today's opossum; the original specimen of the bigger species weighed about 7 kg, but was apparently a young animal so it would've grown further (up to 9 kgs as suggested in a recent study).
This animal captures my imagination because we have opossums where I live, and even tho you almost never see them, at night they come out and look for food along with feral cats.
Incidentally, 7 kg is the weight of my biggest cat, Colonel Bombonel, widely considered a giant abomination by the feral cats, who stampede away whenever they see him. All things considered I think if Thylophorops was still alive and roaming the streets, it'd scare all the cats and more than one human, too
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I wonder if it did roam the streets, would Colonel Bombonel protect us?