Lecture 23- Diversity of Australian mammals Flashcards
What are the mammalian characteristics?
- Have hair
- Females lactate (produce milk) to feed young
- Distinctive skeletal characteristics e.g. of jaw bones
- Endothermic
What are the three groups of mammals?
- Eutherians
- Monotremes
- Marsupials
- Australia is the only continent with all three groups of mammals
- No very large extant native land mammals in Australia
What are the terrestrial Eutherians in Australia like?
- Rodents: rats & mice (64 spp.) * Bats (68 spp.)
- micro-bats (insectivorous)
- fruit bats
- Dingo (pre-European, present
7-10,000 years) - All relatively recent arrivals
What is special about Rodents?
-extremely diverse
What are the subgroups of Marine mammals?
-all Eutherians
• Whales & dolphins (Cetacea)
• Seals (Carnivora) • Dugongs (Sirenia)
What species are in the Monotremes?
- Platypus
- Echidnas (2 species)
- only in Australia
What is unusual in Monotremes?
• They have hair • They lactate (produce milk)
but…..
-are different to other mammals – have unique characters – some “reptilian”:
• Lay eggs • No teats (but feed
young on milk)
• Pectoral girdle and limbs reptile-like
-also have electroreception (to locate prey)
• Specialised sensors in bill • Detect very weak electrical fields
Where are the young in Marsupials?
Females carry young in a pouch
Where are Marsupials today?
- Australia, North America and South America
- Oldest fossils in N America ~ 115 MYA Oldest fossils in Australia: ~ 55 MYA
What are the two main groups of Marsupials?
- Polyprotodont (more than one pair incisors) * Diprotodont (one pair incisors)
What are the polyprotodont marsupials?
Carnivores or omnivores (Australia, PNG & South America) * Bandicoots & bilbies
- Marsupial carnivores (dasyurids)
- e.g. Bilby: endangered but being reintroduced into parts of its former range
- e.g. Eastern barred bandicoot, Tasmanian devil, Planigale, Phascogale, Quoll, Antechinus
What are the diprotodont marsupials?
(herbivores or omnivores) Wombats, koala, kangaroos, possums etc
What is the diversity of macropods (kangaroos) and possums and gliders?
-huge
What are the marsupial moles?
diprotodont/polyprotodont?? sandy deserts, arid central & western Australia
What was the Australian marsupial megafauna?
(Pleistocene; 2.6 MYA – 10, 000 YA)
- Diprotodon Palorchestes Thylacoleo
- giant lizards, snakes & birds