The genus name derives from the Latin word for "shrew" (-sorex), combined with a reference to the Uinta Mountains where the holotype fossils were discovered.
Description
Like other microsyopids, the most discussed feature of Uintasorex is its extremely tiny size. It is thought to have been smaller than the mouse lemur, the smallest extant primate.[2]Uintasorex was once thought to have been insectivorous based on its body mass and the principle of Kay's threshold,[2] which suggested that primates lighter than 500 grams tend to be insectivorous and those heavier than 500 grams are folivorous,[3] but the validity of this rule has come into question and can no longer be considered valid.
The hardness of their enamel allowed Uintasorexteeth to endure long enough after death to undergo fossilization, and much of what is known about the genus comes from dental remains. A defining feature of microsyopids is a distinctive twinning between the hypoconulid-entoconid cusps of the molars, and within the family this feature is most developed in Uintasorex. Well-defined crests on the upper and lower molars suggest the presence of interradicular fibers, a trait seen in other uintasoricinids.[4]Uintasorex sp. is distinguished from U. parvulus by a larger tooth size.
The type species of Uintasorex is U. parvulus. Other species include U. montezumicus[2] and an as-yet unnamed species tenatively known as "Uintasorex sp.".[4]U. montezumicus is defined by UCMP 104179, a tooth recovered from the Solstice Hill locality of the Friars Formation in California.[6]Uintasorex sp. is based on a collection of tiny Uintasorex teeth recovered from the Green River Formation in Utah which went uncatalogued in the archives of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History until they were rediscovered and described by Charles L. Gazin in 1958.
In 1969 two genera, Uintasorex and Niptomomys, were reassigned by anthropologistFrederick Szalay to Uintasoricinae, a new subfamily within Microsyopidae.[4] The suggestion that Uintasorex had been a microsyopid was first privately put forward by Donald E. Russell in 1965, and the idea that the species represented a distinct family from the other taxa it was being grouped received its first mention as a footnote in a 1958 paper by Charles L. Gazin. The relationship was formally established when Szalay assigned previously-unstudied dental fragments to specimen AMNH 55664, Uintasorex teeth collected from the Tabernacle Butte locality in Wyoming, identifying the distinct dental features that are now considered ubiquitous in the family Uintasoricinae. Alveojunctus, Berruvius, Navajovius, and Palenochtha have also been included in Uintasoricinae.
References
^"Uintasorex". Fossilworks.org. Retrieved 17 December 2021.