Catagonus metropolitanus is an extinct species of peccary known from the Pleistocene of Argentina.[2]
^"Catagonus metropolitanus". Fossilworks.
^Ameghino, F. (1904). "Nuevas especies de mamíferos Cretáceos y Terciarios de la República Argentina" [New species of Cretaceous and Tertiary mammals from the Argentine Republic]. Anales de la Sociedad Científica Argentina (in Spanish). 56 (5): 193–208 – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
and 5 Related for: Catagonus metropolitanus information
Parachoerus. If this is accepted, then Catagonus becomes an extinct genus once more. "Catagonusmetropolitanus". Fossilworks. Ameghino, F. (1904). "Nuevas...
has always been restricted to South America. Catagonus is notable in that the type species, C. metropolitanus, is extinct; the living Chacoan peccary was...
species of its genus, Catagonus, despite being the only living representative. Instead, the type is the extinct Catagonusmetropolitanus. Such a case is an...
between Brasiliochoerus and Catagonus, and subsequently the narrow-headed peccary has been included in the genus Catagonus. In 2017, a study on the classification...
Catagonus carlesi, or Parachoerus carlesi, is an extinct species of peccary that lived in Argentina during the Late Pleistocene. Fossils of Catagonus...