HIGHER‐LEVEL RELATIONSHIPS OF THE RECENT EUTHERIAN ORDERS: MORPHOLOGICAL EVIDENCE
Open Access
- 1 September 1986
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Cladistics
- Vol. 2 (4) , 257-287
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-0031.1986.tb00463.x
Abstract
— Diverse morphological evidence from both living and fossil taxa suggests several higher-level groupings of the Recent orders of eutherian mammals. The strongest hypotheses closely relate rodents and lagomorphs within Glires, proboscideans and sirenians within Tethytheria, hyracoids and tethytheres within Paenungulata, chiropterans and dermopterans, and pholidotans and edentates. Somewhat weaker evidence supports groupings of Glires with macroscelideans, primates and tree-shrews with bats and flying lemurs (Archonta), and all Eutheria excluding pangolins and edentates (Epitheria). There is some tenuous evidence for the monophyly of all modern ungulate orders (including cetaceans), and for the division between artiodactyls and other ungulates. Rather than providing only a confusing and unresolved picture of higher eutherian relationships, comparative morphology and paleontology offer some compelling hypotheses that comprise a framework for studies of macromolecular traits.Keywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Glirology: Evolutionary Relationships among Rodents . A Multidisciplinary Analysis. W. Patrick Luckett and Jean-Louis Hartenberger, Eds. Plenum, New York, 1985. xvi, 721 pp., illus. $110. NATO Advanced Science Institutes series A, vol. 92. From a workshop, Paris, July 1984.Science, 1986
- Cranial structure and relationships of the Liassic mammal Sinoconodon*Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1985
- The Use of Tree Comparison MetricsSystematic Zoology, 1985
- Cephalic evidence for the affinities of TubulidentataMammalia, 1985
- Evidence from earliest known erinaceomorph basicranium that insectivorans and primates are not closely relatedNature, 1983
- Oldest known eutherian stapes and a marsupial petrosal bone from the Late Cretaceous of North AmericaNature, 1979
- The Head Skeleton of a New‐Born Manis javanica with Comments on the Ontogeny and Phylogeny of the Mammal Head SkeletonActa Zoologica, 1968
- VII. The monotreme skull: A contribution to mammalian morphogenesisPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, 1916
- A milk dentition in OrcyteropusProceedings of the Royal Society of London, 1890
- 1. On some Points in the Anatomy of the Great Anteater(Myrmecophaga jubata)Journal of Zoology, 1882