Marsupials have short gestation periods, with altricial neonates completing their development attached to a teat, a condition that induces remarkable structural changes in the inguinal region of reproductive females. In… Click to show full abstract
Marsupials have short gestation periods, with altricial neonates completing their development attached to a teat, a condition that induces remarkable structural changes in the inguinal region of reproductive females. In this study, we analyzed the morphological variation in the inguinal region of female museum specimens of Monodelphis domestica in search for external traits reminiscent of their reproductive condition when collected. We examined 427 taxidermied skins of wild females from northeastern Brazil and classified their inguinal region by color, density of fur, shape, and the presence of spots and teats. We determined relative age based on tooth eruption and wear, to infer the chronological order of inguinal changes. These conditions were computed for each age class and for each month over 4 years for samples from two mesoregions in northeastern Brazil, identified from climatic characteristics. Four distinct morphological patterns recognized in the inguinal region of females were associated with the following reproductive conditions: 1) non-lactating: general shape of the pelvic region indistinct from the rest of body (straight), inguinal region lacking teats, same fur density and color (grayish) as the rest of the body; 2) pre-lactating: pelvic and inguinal regions similar to non-lactating, but yellowish fur and presence of small teats; 3) early-lactating: inguinal region with well-developed teats, fur yellowish (rarely whitish) and less dense, and form of the pelvic region rounded; and 4) late or post-lactating: inguinal region with well-developed teats and dark orange and less dense fur, pelvic region rounded. Lactating females were only recorded from age class 4 on. We also found indications that pelage changes in the inguinal region do not revert after reproduction in the wild. Monthly frequencies of the different conditions recorded for lactating females corroborate previous studies that suggested that M. domestica breeds all year long in northeastern Brazil.
               
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