The available collections of Proechimys mostly were made haphazardly with the result that there are extensive areas from which no specimens as yet are available. Thus, actual proof of intergradation is often lacking in areas where it almost certainly occurs. In some extensive areas, however, many samples, from relatively regular intervals, have been available and they provide genuine proof of intergradation. These instances have served as a guide for estimating whether other samples should be considered to be full species or instead merely subspecies of the same species.
Lack of intergradation in any of the characters may be accepted as the criterion of full species. Where two populations occupying the same range (sympatric populations) show different qualitative characters, they almost certainly do not crossbreed. Furthermore the characters that distinguish such kinds of nonintergrading animals are likely to be considered as of full specific value when detected in far distant parts of the range of the subgenus.
In a genus that is widespread and continuously distributed, it is useful to know which characters always distinguish full species and which ones, sometimes or always, distinguish only subspecies, since in a population from a small island, there is, ordinarily, less individual variation than in a corresponding population from the mainland or a larger island; under certain circumstances a person might be tempted to give specific rank to the population when its characters actually are analogous to those separating subspecies elsewhere.
Sometimes it is convenient to recognize species-groups, a systematic category without nomenclatural status, intermediate between the species and the subgenus. When there are two groups of species not sharply separated, including one species whose characters overlap those of each of the two groups, it would seem most appropriate to recognize only species-groups instead of subgenera. When, on the other hand, the two groups of species have mutually exclusive characters and a species with intermediate characters is unknown, the two groups of species can conveniently be accorded separate subgeneric rank.
SUBGENERIC VARIATION
A few characters are common to one group of species and other features are common to a second group. The most striking of these features is the character of the main fold in the molariform teeth. In one group the fold transversely crosses the crown of the tooth and in the other it extends scarcely halfway across. No specimen is intermediate in this respect. These two groups, furthermore, are separated geographically by an important barrier, the arid belt that starts in the northeastern littoral of Brazil (Ceará), and that extends south and southwesterly, more or less accompanying the São Francisco River in the Plateau, to about 20° S. Proechimys is thought not to inhabit this arid belt. At the latitude of 20° S the conditions become more suitable for Proechimys, especially along the rivers which flow eastward, but there the Plateau is replaced by mountains: the Serra Geral at the west, and Serra da Mantiqueira at the south; these ranges are bare of forests at higher elevations. Two groups of species of Proechimys are, therefore, kept geographically isolated: one group lives in southeastern Brazil, and the other lives in a large area to the west which starts at 21° S in Paraguay and Brazil and widens northward and includes, farther west, central and northern Brazil and all the South American countries above 21° S, as well as Central America northward to southern Nicaragua.
The two groups which are here treated as subgenera may be designated as follows:
Trinomys—main fold deep: aristiforms well-developed on the rump and outer thighs; tail no less than 75 per cent of length of head and body; skull without ridges across the parietals; no conspicuous groove for transmission of nerve inside infraorbital foramen; molariform teeth decreasing in size from premolar to third molar; 1 to 3 counterfolds in the molariform teeth.
Proechimys—main fold shallow: aristiforms not developed on rump and outer thighs; tail less than 75 per cent of length of head and body; groove for transmission of nerve present in infraorbital foramen of several subspecies; molariform teeth increasing in size from premolar to second molar; 2 to 5 counterfolds in molariform teeth.