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Unlike placentals, marsupials are born in a semi-embryonic state, and in
most species they are then protected within an abdominal pouch where they
are milk-fed until much more developed. Two thirds of the approximately
250 living marsupial species are found in Australia and its neighboring
islands including New Guinea. Most of the remaining species live
in South America. Currently, the only marsupial that naturally occurs
in North America is the common and widespread Virginia opossum (Didelphis
virginiana). |
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| An
image of a thylacine from a film taken in 1928 at
the Hobart Zoo (Domain site). |
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The third and most ancient
group of living mammals are the monotremes. They feed their young
milk as do other mammals, but they also posses a number of reptilian characteristics,
particularly in respect to their skeletal structure. Also, like reptiles,
they lay eggs. The monotremes are represented today by only three
genera:
Zaglossus (long nosed echidna), Tachyglossus (short
nosed echidna), and Ornithorhynchus (platypus). The echidnas
have shallow pouches in which they hold their single egg and resultant
young, but the platypus does not. Instead, the platypus keeps its
egg in a leaf and stick nest built within a chamber which it excavates
in the bank of a river or creek. The young are raised there until
old enough to venture outside, usually by 17 weeks of age.
The precise ancestral
history of the three living mammal groups is still not completely understood,
and numerous theories exist about the evolutionary relationships between
them.
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| A
circa 1926 photograph of a thylacine at the London Zoo. |
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As compared to the monotremes, placentals and marsupials share a closer
common ancestry with each other. Extremely early marsupials, or mammals
very similar to them in form (proto-marsupials), are considered by some
to be ancestral to the placentals, having split into two groups around
120 million years ago. How the monotremes relate to the marsupials
and placentals is less certain, and has been the subject of considerable
debate. |
Whatever the actual
details of these evolutionary relationships may be, the three extant groups
of mammals have been distinct from one another for a considerable length
of time. However, time itself is the only thing that separates
them, since all mammal groups are descended from a common Mesozoic ancestor
which probably appeared about 195 million years ago. Indeed, one
must keep in mind that all life on Earth is of a common ancestral origin
which extends back at least 3.5 billion years.
When zoologists began
to classify the mammals of Australia, representatives of all three living
groups were found among them, although marsupials were by far the dominant
group.
The great variety of
Australian marsupials include such families as the kangaroos (Macropodidae),
koala (Phascolarctidae), the possums (Phalangeridae, Burramyidae, Petaluridae),
wombats (Vombatidae), quolls, Tasmanian
devil, and marsupial "mice" (Dasyuridae), bandicoots (Peramelidae),
the marsupial "mole" (Notoryctidae), the Numbat (Myrmecobiidae), and the
thylacine (Thylacinidae). Many Australian marsupials are analogues
to the placentals of other continents in that they occupy the same types
of ecological niches. Through evolutionary convergence, a number
of them have even come to resemble certain placentals in general physical
form.
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Today, the kangaroos are the dominant Australian marsupial group.
There are over 50 living species, which vary greatly in size. Adapted
to a variety of habitats, they are Australia's primary native herbivores,
and thus are an analogue to the antelope and deer of other continents.
Of course, they are quite different from these animals in body structure,
as well as reproductive method. The niches of cats, dogs, and smaller
carnivores are occupied in Australia by marsupial equivalents of such,
including quolls, the thylacine, Tasmanian devil, and a number of marsupial
"mice" and "rats".
The wombat holds the niche of a large, burrowing rodent such as a marmot.
Small, gliding marsupials called phalangers live in much the same way as
do the "flying" squirrels of the New World. There is even a marsupial
version of the mole. No marsupial analogues have evolved to fill
the niches of aquatic placentals such as dolphins, whales and seals, possibly
because the marsupial manner of reproduction would make such anatomical
forms highly impractical. |
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| Koala
(Phascolarctos cinereus). |
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The monotremes, represented
today by only three living species, are of particular interest in paleogeographical
studies since they exist solely within the Australasian (Australia
and New Guinea) zoogeographical realm.
Prior to the time when
Europeans began to colonize Australia, bringing their domesticated mammals
with them, very few placental mammals had ever managed to become established
on the continent. A number of bats (which could fly there), a few
rodents (which apparently washed in on floating logs carried from further
north), and of course marine mammals such as dolphins, whales and seals
were among the only placental inhabitants. Stone Age humans migrated
to Australia from Asia by perhaps 40,000 or more years ago. Australia's
wild dog, the dingo (Canis
familiaris dingo), came in with another wave of ancient
immigrants quite some time later. |