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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The Giant peccary (Pecari maximus), is a species of peccary and possibly the fourth species of peccary, discovered in Brazil in 2000 by Dutch naturalist Marc van Roosmalen. In 2003, he and German natural history filmmaker Lothar Frenz succeeded in filming a group and gathering material, which later would serve as the type. Though recently reported, it has been known to locals as caitetu munde and northern Bolivia it knew him before its discovery by the natives and settlers by the name of Chancho de tropa grande, which means "great peccary which lives in pairs". It was formally described in 2007, but the scientific evidence for its species status has later been questioned, which also is one of the reasons for it being evaluated as data deficient by the IUCN.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Giant Peccary
rdfs:comment
  • The Giant peccary (Pecari maximus), is a species of peccary and possibly the fourth species of peccary, discovered in Brazil in 2000 by Dutch naturalist Marc van Roosmalen. In 2003, he and German natural history filmmaker Lothar Frenz succeeded in filming a group and gathering material, which later would serve as the type. Though recently reported, it has been known to locals as caitetu munde and northern Bolivia it knew him before its discovery by the natives and settlers by the name of Chancho de tropa grande, which means "great peccary which lives in pairs". It was formally described in 2007, but the scientific evidence for its species status has later been questioned, which also is one of the reasons for it being evaluated as data deficient by the IUCN.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
statusimage
  • DD
dbkwik:animals/pro...iPageUsesTemplate
Status
  • Data Deficient
Name
  • Giant Peccary
Caption
  • Juvenile
Species
  • Pecari maximus
Genus
Class
Family
Order
Phylum
Location
  • south-central Amazon between the Madeira and the Tapajós River and north Bolivia reaching the east side of the Madidi National Park.
abstract
  • The Giant peccary (Pecari maximus), is a species of peccary and possibly the fourth species of peccary, discovered in Brazil in 2000 by Dutch naturalist Marc van Roosmalen. In 2003, he and German natural history filmmaker Lothar Frenz succeeded in filming a group and gathering material, which later would serve as the type. Though recently reported, it has been known to locals as caitetu munde and northern Bolivia it knew him before its discovery by the natives and settlers by the name of Chancho de tropa grande, which means "great peccary which lives in pairs". It was formally described in 2007, but the scientific evidence for its species status has later been questioned, which also is one of the reasons for it being evaluated as data deficient by the IUCN. Its assumed range encompass the south-central Amazon between the Madeira and the Tapajós River and north Bolivia reaching the east side of the Madidi National Park. It is restricted to Terra Firme forest. Unlike other peccaries in its range, the giant peccary appears to mainly occur in pairs or small family groups. According to its original description, the giant peccary is larger, longer-legged, and proportionally smaller-headed than the only other member of the genus, the collared peccary (Pecari tajacu). Compared to the sympatric populations of the collared peccary, the giant peccary also has thinner fur that is grizzled in brown and white, blacker legs, and a relatively faint collar. Five skins of the giant peccary had a total length of 120–137 cm (47–54 in), while local hunters have estimated a weight of 40–50 kg (88–110 lb). Based on mtDNA, the collared and the giant peccaries are estimated to have diverged 1.0–1.2 million years ago, but these results have been considered questionable due to the low bootstrap support, small sample size, and the absence of nDNA and cytogenetic results. Furthermore,extensive intraspecific variations (both individual and locality-based) are known in the morphology of the collared peccary.
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