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The Sparassodonta (Mammalia, Metatheria) are a group of carnivorous mammals that dominated the macropredatory guild of South America during the Cenozoic. Here, we describe a new sparassodont based on a single specimen from the middle Miocene Quebrada Honda local fauna of southern Bolivia. This specimen (UF 27881) does not clearly correspond to any major sparassodont group (e.g., Hathliacynidae, Borhyaenidae, etc.) and represents a morphotype previously unknown among the Sparassodonta. UF 27881 is distinguished from other sparassodonts by its short, broad, borhyaenid-like rostrum and small size, among other features. However, we decline to coin a new name for UF 27881 due to the fragmentary nature of this specimen and the absence of most of its dentition. This specimen suggests that the appearance of the Sparassocynidae and several hypercarnivorous didelphid taxa (including Thylophorops, Thylatheridium, Lutreolina, and Hyperdidelphys) represent an evolutionary response to the decline in small, predatory sparassodont taxa during the late Cenozoic. This study documents new morphological diversity among the Sparassodonta and highlights the value of fossils from traditionally undersampled parts of South America.

SUPPLEMENTAL DATA—Supplemental materials are available for this article for free at http://www.tandfonline.com/UJVP.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank T. Matson and R. Muehlheim for access to CMNH zoology collections; T. Pucci, R. Wherley, and G. Svenson (CMNH) for photographic assistance with UF 27881; R. Heaney, B. Patterson, and B. Stanley (FMNH) for loans of extant didelphoid specimens; A. Kramarz (MACN) and M. Reguero (MLP) for access to and information about sparassodont specimens in their care; and J. Bloch, R. Hulbert, and B. MacFadden (UF) for allowing us to describe UF 28871 and providing information on its provenance. We are grateful to A. M. Forasiepi for helpful discussions and providing a digital version of her matrix. We thank editor G. W. Rougier and reviewers F. Prevosti and A. M. Forasiepi for helpful criticisms and comments on earlier drafts of the manuscript. This research was supported by NSF EAR 0958733 to D. Croft.

Handling editor: Guillermo Rougier

High resolution color images of UF 27881 are available online in Morphobank.