Fig. 109.—Ant-Bear (Myrmecophaga jubata).—By permission of the N.Y. Zoölog. Soc.
Fig. 110.—Collared Anteater (Tamandua tetradactyla).—By permission of the N.Y. Zoölog. Soc.
Fig. 111.—Six-banded Armadillo (Dasypus sexcinctus).—By permission of the N.Y. Zoölog. Soc.
The third existing suborder of edentates is that of the armadillos (Dasypoda), which have a very complete armour of bony scutes, ossifications in the skin, covered with scales of horn. They are all more or less burrowers in habit and omnivorous in diet, eating roots, insects, worms, etc.; the extraordinary rapidity with which they burrow into the ground is almost their only way of escape from pursuit, but in one genus, Tolypeutes, the animal can roll itself into a ball, completely protected by mail all around. The armadillos are much more varied than the anteaters or sloths and have a wider geographical range, extending from Texas to Patagonia. The head, which is long-snouted, is protected by a shield made up of numerous horn-covered plates of bone, and the tail is encased in a tubular sheath of more or less regular rings, each ring of bony plates and horny scales. The body-shield, or carapace, which covers the back and sides, consists of an anterior and posterior buckler, in which the plates are immovably attached to one another by their edges, and between the two is a series of movable, overlapping bands, the number of which varies in the different genera. In the little Pichiciago (Chlamydophorus truncatus) the head and back are covered with four-sided plates of horn, the bony scutes being small and thin and much reduced. The carapace has no bucklers, but about 20 transverse rows of plates, and is attached along only the middle line of the back and beneath it the body is covered with silky, white fur; the rump is covered with a solid shield of bone, placed nearly vertically and covered with thin scales, and is notched below for the tail, altogether a most exceptional arrangement. Seven or more distinct genera of armadillos are found in the Neotropical region and they display a great range in size; the Giant Armadillo of Brazil (Priodontes) is a yard or more in length, while the little Zaëdyus of Patagonia is smaller than a rabbit and, least of all, the Pichiciago is but five inches long.
Fig. 112.—Nine-banded Armadillo (Tatu novemcinctus).—By permission of the N.Y. Zoölog. Soc.
Two families of marsupials occur in South America. The opossums are much more numerous and varied than in North America; three genera and a large number of species, some not larger than mice, range through the forested parts of the continent. Of particular interest is the little Cænolestes, which has two species, with two enlarged lower front teeth, the sole survivors of a group which is abundantly represented in the Tertiary deposits of Patagonia.