The Santa Rosa local fauna contains mammals, other vertebrates, and some crabs and
charophyte algae. Not all of the fossils found at Santa Rosa have been described in detail yet, and not all the material retrieved has been sorted. Full descriptions have been published of the Santa Rosa marsupials, rodents, and notoungulates. Two single teeth that may represent a bat and a
gondwanathere have also been described. Other fossils found at Santa Rosa have not been described in detail. There are some
xenarthrans, numerous fish representing at least five
families, many
crocodilians, some turtles, possibly some lizards, and a few fossils of amphibians and birds. Crab claws found at the site probably represent the family
Pseudothelphusiidae. The marsupial fauna of Santa Rosa is known from 79 isolated teeth, which represent eleven species. The fauna is taxonomically diverse, comprising members of the orders
Microbiotheria (represented among living marsupials only by the
monito del monte),
Paucituberculata (shrew opossums),
Didelphimorphia (opossums), and the extinct
Sparassodonta and
Polydolopimorphia. Two genera,
Wirunodon and
Kiruwamaq, cannot be assigned to any existing marsupial order. The largest species found, the sparassodont
Patene campbelli, was cat-sized, but most species were the size of a mouse. Most Santa Rosa marsupials are thought to have been
frugivores and/or
insectivores; on the other hand,
Patene was a carnivore. The most common species found, the polydolopimorphian
Wamradolops tsulludon, shows features that suggest it was adapted for breaking down hard food items such as seeds or bark. Hundreds of rodent fossils have been found at Santa Rosa, many of which cannot be identified precisely. These rodents are referable to the
caviomorph group of rodents, which is unique to the Americas, and includes at least eleven species classified in the families
Erethizontidae (New World porcupines),
Echimyidae (spiny rats), and
Agoutidae (agoutis). All Santa Rosa rodents share a common
morphological pattern of the teeth, suggestive of a basal place in the caviomorph radiation. The extinct "ungulate" order
Notoungulata is represented by a few fossils only. Four isolated teeth may represent the same species, a sheep-sized member of the suborder
Toxodontia. A single, very small tooth may belong to a member of the toxodont family
Notohippidae. A jaw fragment is referable to the family
Interatheriidae (suborder
Typotheria). A single damaged lower molar documents the possible presence of a bat at Santa Rosa. The specimen is fragmentary enough that it cannot be identified positively as a bat. It shows some features that suggest a relationship with the living bat family
Noctilionidae (bulldog bats). When published, this specimen represented the oldest known South American bat, but an older bat was described from Argentina in 2005. Another isolated tooth,
LACM 149371, cannot be aligned securely with any mammalian group. Francisco Goin and colleagues, who described this specimen, tentatively suggested that it represents an upper molar of a member of the family
Ferugliotheriidae, part of the ancient and enigmatic group
Gondwanatheria. If this identification is correct, it would be among the youngest known gondwanatheres. == Faunal list ==