The only known specimen was collected by
Herbert Huntingdon Smith at an unknown location on Saint Vincent and later presented to the
Natural History Museum, London, where it was registered as specimen BMNH 97.12.26.1. In 1898,
Oldfield Thomas described the specimen as the
holotype of a new species of
Oryzomys which he named
Oryzomys victus. Although Thomas placed it close to species now placed in
Oligoryzomys, later compilators considered the affinities of
O. victus as unknown; one study placed it in the
Oryzomys tectus group (more or less =
Oecomys). In his 1962 study of Antillean oryzomyines, however, American paleontologist Clayton Ray reaffirmed its affinities with
Oligoryzomys, but he was unable to resolve its relation within the genus. On the one hand, he saw closer morphological similarities to small
Oligoryzomys such as
O. fulvescens and
O. delicatus, but on the other hand larger species such as
O. longicaudatus are closer in size. Ray also considered the possibility that the St. Vincent population was in fact introduced from a still unknown mainland species, but considered this unlikely; no such species has since been found. ==Description==