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Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005
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Page 1: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Monotremes and Marsupials

Biol 455 Mammalogy

Jan 27, 2005

Page 2: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Monotremata Prototheria, retention of various reptilian

features Two families: Ornithorhynchidae and

Tachyglossidae Monotremata = “one opening”

Cloaca, common opening of fecal, urinary and reproductive tracts

Rubbery-shelled eggs (permeable)

Page 3: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Monotremata con’t

Eggs are small, incubated for 10 to 11 days

Neonates have well developed forelimbs and shoulders

Page 4: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Monotremata con’t

No teats Pectoral girdle has coracoid, precoracoid,

and interclavicle bone (similar to Therapsid reptile)

Homeotherm - low Tb of 32 C Sperm are fiiform (threadlike) and testis

structures similar to reptile

Page 5: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Pectoral girdle

Page 6: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Morphology of monotremes Cranium - indistinct sutures Jugal bone reduced or absent Zygomatic arch made up of maxilla and

squamosal bones Dentary bone reduced Adults are edentate Elongate rostrum, lack of teeth, high-

domed cranium - birdlike

Page 7: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Morphology con’t

Cochlea (semicircular canal of inner ear) are not coiled

Have epipubic bones Males have large medial spur on ankle Males have baculum, permanently

abdominal testes and no scrotum

Page 8: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Epipubic bone

Page 9: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Ornithorhynchidae Duck-billed platypus Semiaquatic, semifossorial Near freshwater lakes and rivers, east coast of

Australia and Tasmania Feed on invert., fish and amphibians Adult male 1.7 kg, female smaller Short dense fur covers all but bill, feet, and underside

of tail Bill is soft and pliable, with nostrils at tip

Has tactile receptors to sense electric field generated by muscle contraction of prey

Page 10: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Ornithorhynchidae con’t

Has small eyes and ears Pentadactyle (five-toed) and manus

(forefoot) is webbed Long claws for digging burrow

Page 11: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Ornithorhynchidae con’t Spur on hind limb connect to venom gland

in thigh Platypus has no pouch, female incubate

eggs in burrow Neonates have molariform teeth, shed

before emerge from burrow Keratinized pads

Milk is secreted onto tufts of hair

Page 12: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Ornithorhynchidae con’t

Page 13: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.
Page 14: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Tachyglossidae Short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus)

Australia, New Guinea, and Tasmania 6 kg

Long-beaked echidna (Zaglossus) Forested highland of New Guinea 10 kg

Feed on ants, termites, and insects - ground to paste between tongue and spiny palatal ridge

Have scooplike claws on feet to break anthills and burrows

Ankle spur not venomous

Page 15: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Tachyglossidae con’t Beak contains electroreceptors Guard hairs modified to become spines Mucus that coat tongue to make it sticky No teeth at any stage of development Have a pouch for incubating eggs

Page 16: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Marsupials

Characterized by marsupium Only 50% of species have permanent pouch

Litters that weigh 1% of mother’s body mass Eutherians: litters weigh 50% of mother’s BM

Have well-developed stylar shelf

Page 17: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Marsupials con’t

Lower basal metabolic rate (BMR) - 70% of comparable sized eutherians

Slower postnatal growth Smaller relative brain size No true flight, no fossorial herbivores,

large marsupial carnivores are extinct

Page 18: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Marsupial reproduction

Bifurcated reproductive tract (female) and bifurcated penis (male)

Choriovitilline placenta Limited intrauterine development time and

accelerated development of muscular forelimb Precludes forelimb from becoming hooves,

flippers, or wings

Page 19: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Marsupial reproduction con’t Paired sperm in New World marsupials Marsupium - open anteriorly or

posteriorly, folds of skin Best developed in arboreal species, and

species that burrow or jump Neonate (no more than 1 g) climb to a

teat Once attached, teat swells, keeping neonate

in place

Page 20: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.
Page 21: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Zoogeography Living marsupials occur in NA, Central and SA,

Australasia Marsupials are thought to have originated in North

America Oldest fossils dating 100 mya

Panamanian land bridge developed 2 to 5 mya, major interchange of fauna

65 mya, marsupials moved from SA through Drake Passage to Antartica and Australasia

Australian marsupials evolved in relative isolation from eutherians

Page 22: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Orders and Families 7 orders and 18 extant families Polyprotodonts - unshortened mandible, lower

incisors small and unspecialized Diprotodont - shortened mandible with first pair

of lower incisors enlarged to meet upper incisors

Didactylous - unfused toes, each in own skin sheath

Syndactylous - skeletal elements of 2nd and 3rd toes in common skin sheath

Page 23: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Dentition

Page 24: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Digits

Page 25: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Didelphimorphia Single family, Didelphidae New World distribution Terrestrial burrowers, semiarboreal Solitary and opportunistic feeders Most specialized didelphid, water opossum (aquatic,

webbed hind feet, marsupium watertight during dives)

Page 26: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Didelphimorphia morphology Paired spermatozoa Pentadactyly, with primitive metatherian

dental formula 5/4, 1/1, 3/3, 4/4 =50 Polyprotodont and didactylous Have sparsely haired prehensile tails and

opposable pollex (thumb on forefoot) Some have incrassated tail (store fat in

the base)

Page 27: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.
Page 28: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Paucituberculata

Single family, Caenolestidae “Shrew” or “rat” opossum Dense vegetation of northwestern

Samerica Nocturnal, insectivorous or omnivorous,

and terrestrial Paired spermatozoa

Page 29: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Small, shrewlike Long rostrum, adult weigh 40g No marsupium Didactylous, only New World marsupial that is

diprotodont Lower canine vestigial

Paucituberculata morphology

Page 30: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Microbiotheria

Single family, Microbiotheriidae One species, monito del monte (Dromiciops

gliroides) South central Chile in beech/bamboo forest Small, 16-30g Have prehensile tail and pouch Greatly inflated auditory bullar Called “colocolos” by natives, bad omen

Page 31: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Dasyuromorphia Small to medium sized, incl. carnivorous

species (Tasmanian devil and quoll) Polyprotodont and didactylous Canines well-developed, have carnassial

dentition Tails never prehensile 3 families: Thylacinidae, Myrmecobiidae,

Dasyuridae

Page 32: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.
Page 33: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Numbat

Page 34: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Dasyuromorphia con’t

Page 35: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Peramelemorphia Bandicoots and bilbies - Australasia 2 families, Peramelidae and Peroryctidae Terrestrial omnivores Have chorioallantoic placenta (no villi) Short compact body with long pointed rostrum Bandicoots have well-developed patella

(kneecap) and no clavicle Polyprotodont Marsupium opens posteriorly

Page 36: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.
Page 37: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Diprotodontia

8 families, 116 species Diprotodont, syndactylous In arboreal diprotodonts, first two digits of

forefeet oppose the other three digits - schizodactylous Hallux (big toe) opposable (not in terrestrial

species)

Page 38: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Phascolarctidae

Koala

Page 39: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Vombatidae

Wombat - powerful burrower 30 kg Grazing herbivore, dentition open-rooted

Page 40: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Phalangeridae

Brushtail possum, cuscus Long prehensile tail, excellent climbers

Page 41: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Potoroidae

Bettongs, potoroos Weak prehensile tail Upper canine well developed Have embryonic diapause

Page 42: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Macropodidae Kangaroos and wallabies Grazing herbivores Similar to artiodactyls Molar hypsodont, mesial drift of cheekteeth

Page 43: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Burramyidae

Pygmy possum - smallest possum 7-50g Exhibit embryonic diapause

Page 44: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Acrobatidae Feathertailed glider and feather-tailed possum New Guinea Stiff, featherlike hairs on side of tails Feathertailed glider - smallest gliding mammal

(10-14g) Both species nectivorous with brush-tipped

tongue Exhibit embryonic diapause

Page 45: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Pseudocheiridae

Slow-moving, ringtail possum Feed on leaves, aboreal Molars are selenodont Schizodactylous digits Prehensile tail Have marsupium

Page 46: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Petauridae

Striped possums and wrist-winged gliders Petaurus similar to NA gliding squirrels Prehensile tail, opposable hallux Have marsupium Diprotodont but molars bunodont

Page 47: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Tarsipedidae Honey possum 12 g Nectivorous Long pointed rostrum with brush-tipped

tongue, small peglike teeth Prehensile tail, hallux opposable, pads on

digits for gripping branches Delayed implantation

Page 48: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Notoryctemorphia Marsupial mole Secretive, completely fossorial, eats beetles and

larvar Similar to eutherian talpids and chrysochlorids “Swim” through ground, substrate collapse behind, no

permanent tunnels Spend time aboveground too, active both day and

night Fusiform, scooplike claw, thick keratinized nasal

shield (pushing dirt) Cervical vertebrae fused, no pinna, vestigial eye

Page 49: Monotremes and Marsupials Biol 455 Mammalogy Jan 27, 2005.

Notoryctemorphia con’t

Epipubic bone reduced Molars zalambdodont (v-shaped) Eaten by aborigines