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DIVERSITY OF MAMMALS Chapter 30.2

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1 DIVERSITY OF MAMMALS Chapter 30.2
OBJECTIVES: 1. State the various characteristics of mammals in each of three subgroups. 2. Describe various adaptations that contribute to the diversity of mammals.

2 Mammal Classification
● the Class Mammalia is divided into three subgroups based on reproductive methods 1. Monotremes: mammals that reproduce by laying eggs (duck-billed platypus and echidna - live only in Australia, Tasmania and New Guinea)

3 ● unique features of monotremes include reptilian bone structure in shoulder area, lower body temp than most mammals, a mix of chromosome size (normal, mammal and reptile-small)

4 marsupials: pouched animals with a short gestation period
● immediately following birth, the offspring crawl into a pouch (skin and hair) on the outside of the mother’s body (as early as 8d post fertilization) and continue to develop and be nourished with milk from mammary glands

5 ● marsupials typically live in Australia (and nearby islands) – the opossum is the only marsupial in N America

6 placental mammals: have a placenta (organ that provides food and oxygen to and removes waste and carbon dioxide from the developing young) - give birth to young that do not require further development in a pouch… placental mammals are represented by 18 different orders…

7 Order Insectivora (shrews, hedgehogs, moles)
 smallest mammals, pointed snouts, live underground, insect-eaters

8 Order Chiroptera (bats)
 nocturnal, use sonar, adapted for flight, fruit and insect-eaters

9 Order Primates (monkeys, apes, humans)
 binocular vision, large brains, most are tree-dwellers, opposable thumbs

10 Order Xenarthra (anteaters, sloths, armadillos)
 toothless or peg-like teeth, insect-eaters

11 Order Rodentia (beavers, rats, woodchucks, marmots, squirrels, hamsters and gerbils)
 sharp incisor teeth, plant-eaters

12 Order Logomorpha (rabbits, pikas, hares)
● back legs are longer than front, adapted to jumping, incisors continuously grow

13 Order Carnivora (dogs, cats, wolves, bears, seals, walruses, coyotes, skunks, otters, minks, weasles) ● teeth adapted to tear flesh, meat-eaters

14 Order Proboscidea (elephants)
● long trunks, incisors become long tusks, largest land animal

15 Order Sirenia (manatees and dugongs)
● slow moving, big heads, no hind limbs

16 Order Perissodactyla (horses, zebras, rhinoceroses)
● hoofed, odd number of toes, plant-eaters

17 Order Artiodactyla (deer, antelope, cattle, sheep, pigs, goats, hippopotamus)
● hoofed, even number of toes, plant-eaters that chew cud

18 Order Cetacea (whales, dolphins, porpoises)
● front limbs that are flippers, no hind limbs, nostril forms a blowhole


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