Pudella carlae, the Peruvian Yungas pudu, is a species of deer from Peru. It was found in 2024 to be a distinct species from the northern pudu, from which it is separated geographically by the Huancabamba Depression. It is the first living deer species to be described in the 21st century.
The southern population was found to be a distinct species from P. mephistophiles in 2024. At first believed by the researchers to be a subspecies of the latter, it was finally described as the new species P. carlae, distinguished by both morphological differences and genetic variation. It has been reported to be the first extant deer species discovered in the 21st century, and the first in the New World in more than 60 years.
The study describing P. carlae found that it and the northern pudu, P. mephistophiles, were not directly related to the southern pudu, Pudu puda. As the latter is the type species of the genus Pudu, the former two were placed in the resurrected genus Pudella to account for this distinction. That genus was originally erected in 1913 to account for major differences between the northern and southern pudu.
Both genera Pudu and Pudella belong to the tribe Odocoileini, which includes the Neotropical deer, although they are not immediate relatives.
The body fur is coarse, long, and orange-brown, distinguishing it from the darker coloration of the other two species. The head is mostly black, although not as fully as in P. mephistophiles, as the body's coloration extends to the forehead. Ears are oval, contrasting with the rounded ears of P. mephistophiles and the pointed ears of P. puda. The shape of the incisors also differs from those of other pudus, being more spatulated than in P. mephistophiles. The skull is also different, being more elongated, with larger premaxilla and , wider braincase and zygomatic breadth.
It lives at altitudes ranging from .
Description
Ecology and behavior
Range and habitat
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