Microbiotheriidae
Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxobox
Microbiotheriidae is a family of australidelphian marsupials represented by only one extant species, the monito del monte, and a number of extinct species known from fossils in South America, Western Antarctica, and northeastern Australia.<ref name=msw3>Template:MSW3 Microbiotheria</ref>
Microbiotheriids were once thought to be members of the order Didelphimorphia (which contains the Virginia opossum); however, an accumulation of both anatomical and genetic evidence in recent years has led to the conclusion that microbiotheriids and other microbiotheres are not didelphids at all, but are instead most closely related to the Australasian marsupials; together, the microbiotheres and the Australian orders form the clade Australidelphia which are now thought to have first evolved in the South American region of Gondwana.
Biogeography and evolutionEdit
The oldest microbiotheriid and microbiothere currently recognised is Khasia cordillerensis, based on fossil teeth from Early Palaeocene deposits at Tiupampa, Bolivia. Numerous genera are known from various Palaeogene and Neogene fossil sites in South America. A number of possible microbiotheres, again represented by isolated teeth, have also been recovered from the Middle Eocene La Meseta Formation of Seymour Island, Western Antarctica. Finally, several undescribed microbiotheres have been reported from the Early Eocene Tingamarra Local Fauna in northeastern Australia; if this is indeed the case, then these Australian fossils have important implications for understanding marsupial evolution and biogeography. The distant ancestors of the monito del monte, it is thought, remained in what is now South America while others entered Antarctica and eventually Australia during the time when all three continents were joined as part of Gondwana.<ref name="LAT">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name = "Nilsson">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Dromiciops is thought to have evolved from members of the genus Microbiotherium, known from the early Miocene of South America, with some authors considering the genera indistinguishable. All other genera, like Pachybiotherium, had become extinct by the late Miocene.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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- Kingdom Animalia
- Phylum Chordata
- Subphylum Vertebrata
- (unranked) Amniota
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- Microbiotheria (monitos del monte)
- Notoryctemorphia (marsupial moles)
- Dasyuromorphia (quolls and dunnarts)
- Peramelemorphia (bilbies and bandicoots)
- Diprotodontia (kangaroos, koalas, and relatives)
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|group2 = Afrotheria |list2 =
- Afrosoricida (tenrecs, golden moles, and otter shrews)
- Macroscelidea (elephant shrews)
- Tubulidentata (aardvarks)
- Hyracoidea (hyraxes)
- Proboscidea (elephants)
- Sirenia (dugongs and manatees)
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- Eulipotyphla (hedgehogs, shrews, moles and relatives)
- Chiroptera (bats)
- Pholidota (pangolins)
- Carnivora (dogs, cats and relatives)
- Perissodactyla (horses, zebras, donkeys, rhinoceroses and tapirs)
- Artiodactyla (pigs, camels, hippos, deer, buffalo, gazelles, giraffes, whales, dolphins and relatives)
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- Rodentia (rats, mice, guinea pigs, squirrels, beavers, chinchillas, porcupines, capybaras and relatives)
- Lagomorpha (rabbits, hares and pikas)
- Scandentia (treeshrews)
- Dermoptera (colugos)
- Primates (lorises, lemurs, tarsiers, monkeys, apes (including humans) and relatives)
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