|
Find more facts and information on our topic page about
marsupial
|
marsupial
marsupial , member of the order Marsupialia, or pouched mammals. With the exception of the New World opossums and an obscure S American family (Caenolestidae), marsupials are now found only in Australia, Tasmania, New Guinea, and a few adjacent islands. They are generally distinguished from placental mammals by the absence of a placenta connecting the embryo with its mother, although in a few forms the female has a rudimentary placenta that functions for a short time. The embryo is nourished during its brief gestation by a fluid secreted by the mother's uterus. The young are born in a very undeveloped state; at birth the great gray kangaroo is about 1 in. (2.5 cm) long and the opossum about 1 1/2 in. (3.8 cm) long. Immediately after birth the young crawl to the mother's nipples and remain attached to them while continuing their development. As they are still too helpless to suckle, milk is squirted into them by the periodic contraction of muscles over the mother's mammary glands. In nearly all marsupials the female's nipples are covered by a pouch, or marsupium, formed by a fold of abdominal skin. Even after the suckling stage the young return at times to the pouch for shelter and transportation. In many species the young are carried on the mother's back after the suckling stage. In addition to having a less efficient reproductive system than the placental mammals, marsupials are of generally lower intelligence. They were once widespread over the earth, but were displaced in most regions as the more successful placental mammals evolved. The Australian region, which has been isolated from contact with other regions since the Cretaceous period, had almost no native placental mammals, and the marsupials were able to continue their evolution there without competition. They underwent an adaptive radiation in Australia comparable to that of placental mammals in the rest of the world, evolving many forms that superficially resemble various placental mammals and fill the same ecological niches. Thus, there are animals known as Tasmanian wolves (see thylacine ), marsupial moles, marsupial mice, and native cats (see dasyure ), which live very much like the correspondingly named placental mammals and, in many cases, are strikingly similar in appearance. See bandicoot , numbat , phalanger , Tasmanian devil , wombat .
Bibliography: See H. Tyndale-Biscoe, Life of Marsupials (1973); A. K. Lee and A. Cockburn, Evolutionary Ecology of Marsupials (1985).
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)
|
What Some Animals Will Do to Survive on an Island
Magazine article from: Ask; 7/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...islands that marsupials are common. Elsewhere, placental mammals dominate...humans are all placental mammals. Why aren't marsupials more widespread...impossible for placental mammals to invade...Australia's marsupials thrived...
Read more
|
|
Tiny tooth upends Australian history.
Magazine article from: Science News; 4/11/1992; ; 617 words
; ...and the other strange marsupials found in the land down...in external pouches, marsupials have dominated Australian...continents, though, marsupials were largely wiped out by placental mammals. Judging from that...paleontologists have presumed marsupials to be an inferior group...may ...
Read more
|
|
Old habits die hard. (spectrum).(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Ecos; 7/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...of competition from placental mammals during the early Tertiary...the case? Why didn't marsupials share Australasia with placental mammals? Why, after surviving...provisionally identified as a placental. If this is the case, the argument that early marsupials thrived in ...
Read more
|
|
Paleontology: An Unusual Find in Australia
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 11/24/1997; ; 231 words
; ...wombats. All are marsupials, which differ...cousins, the placental mammals, in that they...accident of timing. Marsupials arose during...a bit before placental mammals. At the beginning...broke off before placental mammals hit the big time...presumably allowed its ...
Read more
|
|
Jaw may be from an early placental mammal
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 12/28/1997; ; 216 words
; ...wombats. All are marsupials, mammals that...cousins, the placental mammals, in that they...or marsupium. Marsupials arose 136 million...a bit before placental mammals. At the beginning...broke off before placental mammals hit the big time...presumably allowed its ...
Read more
|
|
Fossil Is Oldest of Placental Mammal; Shrew-Like Creature Lived 125 Million Years Ago Among Predatory Dinosaurs
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/25/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...animal is a relative of placental mammals, but it is a very primitive...the ancestor of all placental mammals. Eomaia is the latest...are shared only by placental mammals. But the team also...biologically closer to the marsupials -- pouched mammals...evolutionary line to ...
Read more
|
|
The rise of placental mammals; origin, timing, and relationships of the major extant clades.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: SciTech Book News; 9/1/2005; 147 words
; 080188022X The rise of placental mammals; origin, timing, and relationships of the major extant...State U.), this volume examines the evolutionary success of placental mammals (which range from bats to hippos to whales). Contributors...
Read more
|
|
Groovy bones: mammalian ear structure evolved more than once.(This Week)
Magazine article from: Science News; 2/12/2005; ; 340 words
; ...is similar in all three extant groups of mammals: the placental mammals, which bear live young, the pouched marsupials, and the egg-laying monotremes, such as the duck-billed...stapes-incus-malleus configuration independently of marsupial and placental mammals. In mammals, the series of ...
Read more
|
|
Opossums, exposed UNM researchers contribute to study mapping the genomes of tiny creatures
Newspaper article from: Albuquerque Journal; 5/10/2007; ; 382 words
; ...humans and other placental mammals, babies do more of...development in the womb. Marsupials give birth earlier...humans and other placental mammals happens in the womb...place after birth in marsupials. One of the opossums...
Read more
|
|
Mr. Wallace's line.(biogeographic division between Oriental and Australian regions)
Magazine article from: Discover; 8/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...Southeast Asia, for example, is home to a rich array of placental mammals -- primates, squirrels, big cats, and hoofed mammals...that are not found in the Australian region. Among placental mammals, only bats and rats are native Australian species. Conversely, Asia completely lacks Australia's ...
Read more
|
For more facts and information,
see all related premium articles
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
marsupial
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
marsupial Mammal of which the female usually has a pouch (marsupium...protected. At birth, the young are not fully formed. Most marsupials are Australasian, and include such varied types as the...koala , wombat , Tasmanian devil , bandicoot , and marsupial mole . The only marsupials to live outside ...
Read more
|
|
marsupial
Book article from: Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Any mammal of the infraclass Marsupialia, characterized by premature birth...Americas and seven species of ratlike marsupials in South America. Many species have...young continue their development. marsupial marsupial marsupial
Read more
|
|
Marsupial
Book article from: Biology
Marsupial Marsupials, also known as metatherian mammals, are an ancient and diverse mammal...cranial and skeletal characteristics, including larger numbers of teeth. Marsupials also share a unique pattern of reproduction and development of the...
Read more
|
|
marsupial
Book article from: Oxford Dictionary of Rhymes
marsupial •beau idéal, ideal, real, surreal •labial • microbial • connubial • adverbial...baronial , ceremonial, colonial, matrimonial, monial, neocolonial, patrimonial, testimonial •participial • marsupial • burial , Meriel •terrestrial • ...
Read more
|
|
marsupial
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology
marsupial of or resembling a pouch XVII; epithet of mammals having a pouch for their young XIX. — modL. marsüpiālis , f. L. marsūpium pouch — Gr. marsúpion , marsípion , dim. of mársipos purse, bag; see -AL1 .
Read more
|