Pediomyidae and
Pediomys expanded to include such a diversity of species and genera that it began to be suspected to be an
artificial group. A revision of pediomyids by Brian M. Davis in 2007 recognized that only the type species
P. elegans was within
Pediomys, and the remaining species had to be reassigned. For
P. exiguus, which was found to not be a member of Pediomyidae, Davis named the new genus
Apistodon in reference to its unstrustworthy classification. The superfamily
Pediomyoidea was named to include Pediomyidae,
Aquiladelphidae and
Glasbiidae, with Pediomyidae including a restricted
Pediomys, the new genus
Leptalestes, and
Protolambda.
P. hatcheri,
P. florencae and
P. clemensi were moved to
Protolambda, and
P. krejcii,
P. prokrejcii (including
P. fassetti),
P. cooki were moved into
Leptalestes. As a result,
Pediomys is restricted to only
P. elegans and an unnamed species from
Prince Creek Formation, with its material including a large number of teeth from a variety of
Lancian formations.
Pediomys is an important taxon to the understanding of Late Cretaceous marsupials as it has been known for so long, and is possibly also the only one to have survived the
K-T Extinction, with a possible molar from the
Puercan Ravenscrag Formation. Material from the
Dinosaur Park Formation is very similar to
P. elegans but also likely represents a new species. }} }} ==References==