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Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). e labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammal This is the commonly used crown-clade definition.
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Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes

Luo et al., (2002).

Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

This is the commonly used crown-clade definition.

Page 2: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Luo et al., (2002).

We’ll look first at the Morganucodontids.From the latest Triassic and early Jurassic.

Page 3: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Best know from the genus Morganucodon.

Small – The skull length was around 3 cm and total length around 10 cm.

Skull had large nasal cavity. Respiratory turbinates probably present.

Well-developed inner ear region.

Very large eye sockets

Primitive limb girdles.

Page 4: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Best know from the genus Morganucodon.

Dentary was greatly expanded.

Articular was small and still present.

The angular was on mandible

Cheek teeth had three cusps

Alternate-site chewing.

Insectivorous.

Page 5: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Luo et al., (2002).

We’ll next look at the Triconodonts.

Page 6: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Triconodonts

Teeth similar to Morganucodontids but cusps are linearized.

Mammalian pectoral girdle.

Pelvic girdle is still ancestral.

Had a very sprawling posture.

Great example of mosaic evolution.

Page 7: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Triconodonts

About a meter long, and probably was carnivorous.

Repenomamus.

Hu et al., 2005, Science, 433:139

Derived pectoral girdle & ancestral pelvic girdle.

Page 8: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Multituberculates

“Rodents of the Mesozoic”

Page 9: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Multituberculates

Diverse and persistent group• Dates from upper Jurassic, spans Cretaceous-Tertiary, coextisted with

modern mammals• Mouse-sized to marmot-sized

Named for unique dentition• Chisel-like incisors• Large diastema• Complex, grinding molars (source of name)

Page 10: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Multituberculates

There’s good evidence that at lest some of the multituberculates were arboreal.

Their diversification coincides with the early Cretaceous diversification of flowering plants (angiosperms).

Page 11: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Paraphyletic- used informally

• Mid Jurassic

• Earliest bifunctional teeth - single cheek tooth with grinding and shearing function.

• Tribosphenic molars, ( primitive tooth type for living mammals)

“Pantotheres”

Page 12: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Bishops, Ausktribosphenos

Mesozoic Mammals: Recent discoveries

Page 13: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Bishops, Ausktribosphenos

Actually related to Monotremes, implying a dual origin for bifunctional teeth.

Page 14: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

195 MYA

Page 15: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Hadrocodium

This pushes the date for the origin of mammals back.

Page 16: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Z-X Luo et al. Nature 476, 442-445 (2011) doi:10.1038/nature10291

Juramaia sinensis

The oldest eutherian (placental mammal) ~ 160 MYA

Page 17: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Just in last few years, more diversity has been discovered among Mesozoic mammals.

Luo (2007. Nature, 450:1011)

Page 18: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Monotremes – egg-laying mammals.

Order - Monotremata: ‘One hole’

• Cloaca (sewer) - single opening for unrinary, digestive, & reproductive tracts.

• Earliest fossils from Cretaceous (>120 MYA, record poor, but increasing)

Page 19: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Monotremes – Mosaic of primitive and derived characters.

Primitive Characters

Cloaca

Skull characters - possess pre- and post frontal bones.- no auditory bulla- lacrimal bones absent

Pectoral girdle

Epipubic bones.

Cervical ribs.

Page 20: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Monotremes – Mosaic of primitive and derived characters.

Primitive Characters

-Reproductive characters- oviparous

- eggs have huge amount of yolk relative to therians

- eggs are shelled - have a shell gland

- mammary glands have separate openings, no nipple, and young lap milk from tufts of fur rather than suckling.

- male lacks a scrotum, and testes remain in the abdominal cavity.

- males lack seminal vessicles

Page 21: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Monotremes – Mosaic of primitive and derived characters.

Derived Characters

Venom

Leathery bill or beak.

Raspy pads instead of teeth (as adults).

Electroreceptors in bill of platypuses

Echidnas have spines.

Page 22: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Order Monotremata, Family Tachyglossidae

Tachyglossus - short-beaked echidna

Zaglossus - long-beaked echidna

Page 23: Lecture 3 – Mammalian Diversity: Mesozoic Mammals & Monotremes Luo et al., (2002). Node labeled 1 indicates our (stable) clade-based definition of Mammalia.

Order Monotremata, Family OrnithorhynchidaeOrnithorhynchus - platypus