Australosphenida
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Australosphenida Fossil range: Early Cretaceous - Recent |
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The Australosphenida are a clade of mammals which has nearly entirely died out. Today, living specimens exist only in Australia and New Guinea with only five surviving species, but fossils have been found in Madagascar and Argentina. The surviving species consist of the platypus and 4 species of echidnas.
This grouping includes the following animals:
- Monotremata, divided into families Kollikodontidae†, Ornithorhynchidae (platypus), Steropodontidae† and Tachyglossidae (echidnas)
- Ausktribosphenida†, including the genera Ambondro, Asfaltomylos, Ausktribosphenos and Bishops from the Middle Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous of Argentina, Madagascar and Australia
The clade Australosphenida was proposed by Luo et al. (2001, 2002) and was initially left unranked, as the authors do not apply the Linnaean hierarchy. In Benton (2005) it is ranked as a 'superdivision', i.e. one or two levels below the infraclass.
The grouping embodies an hypothesis about the evolution of molar teeth in mammals. Living monotremes are toothless as adults, but the juvenile platypus, fossil monotremes and Ausktribosphenida all share a pattern of three molar cusps arranged in a triangle or V shape, which is known as the tribosphenic type of molar. Tribosphenic molars have long been held to characterize the subclass Theria (marsupials, placentals and their extinct relatives) while monotremes were thought to be related to fossil groups with a linear alignment of cusps: morganucodontids, docodonts, triconodonts and multituberculates, all of which were united with the monotremes into the 'subclass Prototheria'. Defined in this way, the 'Prototheria' is no longer recognised as a valid clade, since the linear cusp pattern is a primitive condition within Mammalia and cannot supply the shared derived character which is required to establish a subgroup. Instead, the available evidence suggests that the monotremes descend from a Mesozoic radiation of tribosphenic mammals in the southern continents (hence the name Australosphenida, meaning 'southern wedges'), but this interpretation is highly controversial.
According to Luo et al., tribosphenic molars were evolved by the Australosphenida independently of the true Tribosphenida, or Boreosphenida (that is, the therians and their relatives) in the northern continents. Others contend that the Ausktribosphenida in fact belong to the placentals and were therefore true tribosphenids, but unrelated to the ancestry of the monotremes.[1] If this were confirmed, it would entail abandoning the clade Australosphenida.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Benton 2005: 300, 306-308.
[edit] References
- Benton, Michael J. 2005. Vertebrate Palaeontology. 3rd ed. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-632-05637-1
- Luo, Z.-X., R.L. Cifelli and Z. Kielan-Jaworowska. 2001. Dual origin of tribosphenic mammals. Nature 409: 53-7.
- ———. 2002. In quest for a phylogeny of Mesozoic mammals. Acta Palaeontologia Polonica 47: 1-78.
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