Title: The science of Mammalogy
1The science of Mammalogy
- A very brief history
- chapters 1 and 2
2Age of Exploration and Discovery1700s to early
1800s
- The very strange animals in Australia
- No country ever produced a more extraordinary
assemblage of indigenous productions 1818-1822 - In this remote part of the earth, Nature (having
made horses, oxen, ducks, geese, oaks, elms, and
all regular productions for the rest of the
world) seems determined to have a bit of play,
and to amuse herself as she pleases 1819
3Examplethe duck-billed platypusOrnithorhynchus
anatinus
egg-laying mammal??
venemous spur
bird-like bill
- Was this a real animal, or a hoax??
- first specimens to European museums - 1799
4North American MammalogyStage 1 mammalogy as
discoveryLewis and Clark expedition1803-1806
- Discovered a Village of Small animals that
burrow in the grown...Killed one and Caught one a
live by poreing a great quantity of Water in his
hole we attempted to dig to the beds of one of
those animals, after digging 6 feet, found by
running a pole down that we were not half way to
his Lodge...The Village of those animals Covd.
about 4 acres of Ground...and Contains great
numbers of holes on the top of which those little
animals Set erect, make a Whistleing noise and
whin allarmed Step into their hole. we pord into
one of those holes 5 barrels of Water without
filling it.
5Black-tailed prairie dogCynomys ludovicianus
- a keystone species of enormous ecological
importance in short-grass prairie ecosystems
6North American MammalogyStage 2 mammalogy as
resources
- Trappers
- Fur Traders
- Whalers
Beaver Castor canadensis another keystone
species of enormous ecological importance in
riparian ecosystems
7North American MammalogyStage 3 mammalogy as
add-ons to expeditions with other objectives
- Army and Railroad Survey Expeditions
- Spencer Baird 1859, General Report on
- North American Mammals
- Edgar Mearns 1907, Mammals of the
- Mexican Boundary of the United States
8North American MammalogyStage 4 mammalogy as
systematic inventories
- Bureau of Biological Survey
- C. Hart Merriam 1889,
- North American Fauna series began
- Vernon Bailey 1891, Death Valley Expedition
(including Las Vegas Valley) - Nelson and Goldman 1922, Lower California and
its Natural Resources (from 1905-1906 expeditions)
9North American MammalogyStage 4 mammalogy as
systematic inventories
- Bureau of
- Biological
- Survey
- Vernon Bailey, C. Hart Merriam, T.S. Palmer, A.K.
Fisher
10North American MammalogyStage 4 mammalogy as
systematic inventories
- Bureau of
- Biological
- Survey
11North American MammalogyStage 5 mammalogy as
science
- American Society of Mammalogists - 1919
- Journal of Mammalogy
12North American MammalogyStage 6 modern mammalogy
13Lecture, Textbook, other resources
- Always attend the lecture
- Supplement the lecture with the text and other
resources - Syllabus Organization
- first part Evolution, Biogeography
- second part Taxonomically, by clades
- Core chapters (11-20)
- Chapters with additional information
14Evolution of Modern Mammalsfundamental key
innovations that define a mammal
- cranial
- locomotor
- physiology
- central nervous system
- sensory
- reproduction
15Mammals vs. ReptilesMetabolic Rate
Nagy 2005
16Mammals vs. ReptilesHair
17Mammals vs. ReptilesReproduction
Placenta
Mammary Glands
18Mammals vs. ReptilesBrain Size
19Evolution of Modern Mammals
- First mammals were very small
- what does body size suggest about key
innovations in the evolution of mammals? - First topic for next week...