The members of the genus
Nesophontes, sometimes called
West Indies shrews, were members of the
extinct family of mammals
Nesophontidae in the order Soricomorpha. This is the only genus described for this family. They were endemic to
Cuba,
Hispaniola (
Dominican Republic and
Haiti),
Puerto Rico, the
United States Virgin Islands, and the
Cayman Islands. Although reliable estimates are unavailable, these animals are widely believed to have survived the
Pleistocene extinction since remains have been found among those of
Rattus and
Mus species. Some authorities estimate extinction coinciding with the arrivals of
rats (
Rattus) aboard
Spanish vessels in the early 16th century (1500). Others, such as Morgan and Woods, claim that some species survived until the early 20th century. Their relations to the other
West Indian soricomorphs, the
solenodons, remain unclear.