Meet the Mysterious Long-Nosed Chilean Shrew Opossum

Yes, you read that right. In the forests of Chile’s Valdivian Coastal Reserve, there is a small mammal known, in English, as the “long-nosed Chilean shrew opossum.” In Spanish, it’s comadrejita trompuda, and to scientists, it’s Rhyncholestes raphanarus.

In all languages, this fascinating relict marsupial is the last of its kind—the only known living member of the Rhyncholestes genus of shrew opossum remaining on Earth. Scientists believe it has lived, largely unchanged, in the temperate forests of Chile and Argentina since at least the Oligocene (between 36 and 23 million years ago).

Still, despite its longevity and all the advancements in science and knowledge, notes researcher Eduardo Silva of the Universidad Austral de Chile, “the long-nosed Chilean shrew opossum [remains] one of Chile’s least-known mammals.”

The Least Known of the Little Known

The first long-nosed Chilean shew opossum was described by science in 1924. Zoologist Wilfred Osgood was exploring the West Coast of South America and spotted a small “shrew-like” animal in the temperate rainforest on Chile’s Chiloé island. While he never documented long-nosed shrew opossums on the mainland, he predicted the species would be found in similar temperate rainforests within Chile (and possibly Argentina).

He was right.

There are two known populations of long-nosed Chilean shrew opossum. One on the island and one in the rainforest of the mainland. The current consensus is that thousands of years ago, part of what is now Chiloé island was covered in glaciers—except for an area of rainforest that remained unglaciated and connected to the continental land mass.

In geologic time, the 12,000 years or so since the end of the last Ice Age is less than a blink. The two populations of long-nosed Chilean shrew opossums don’t appear to have had enough time to develop the differences that would separate them into subspecies of Rhyncholestes. And though some scientists have suggested they should be divided, the most comprehensive morphological study of long-nosed Chilean shrew opossum I could find (published in 2020) supports the single-species designation.

A (Very) Brief Evolutionary History of South America’s Shrew Opossums

Manas Ranjan Sahoo
Manas Ranjan Sahoo

I’m Manas Ranjan Sahoo: Founder of “Webtirety Software”. I’m a Full-time Software Professional and an aspiring entrepreneur, dedicated to growing this platform as large as possible. I love to Write Blogs on Software, Mobile applications, Web Technology, eCommerce, SEO, and about My experience with Life.

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