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Placental Mammals

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Placental Mammals Classification Order Rodentia: Gnawing Mammals Largest mammalian order 1800 species Mice, squirrels, porcupines, beavers Every continent except ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Placental Mammals


1
Placental Mammals
  • Classification

2
Order Rodentia Gnawing Mammals
  • Largest mammalian order
  • 1800 species
  • Mice, squirrels, porcupines, beavers
  • Every continent except Antarctica
  • Large incisors in upper and lower jaw that grow
    throughout their life

Capybara
3
Order Rodentia
  • Basically defenseless verse predators
  • Their reproduction habits allow them to survive
  • Reach sexual maturity quickly
  • Have short gestation period give birth to
    altricial young
  • Produce large litters
  • Can reproduce frequently

4
Order Rodentia
  • Field mice
  • Weaned at three weeks
  • Independent at four weeks
  • Capable of bearing litters at six weeks
  • Capable of producing up to seventeen litters in a
    single year
  • A single individual could produce around 75
    offspring in one year

5
Order Lagomorphs
  • Rabbits, hares, pikas
  • 80 species
  • Herbivores
  • Fast moving
  • Reproductive habits similar to rodents
  • Also have a pair of always growing incisor teeth
    like rodents
  • Have an additional pair of chisel-shaped teeth
    outside the other pair

6
Order Carnivora Meat-Eating Mammals
  • Most of the meat-eating mammals
  • Enlarged canine fangs and sharp molars for
    tearing flesh

7
Order Carnivora
  • Family Felidae- cats, lions, tigers, cheetahs
  • Family Ursidae- bears
  • Family Canidae- dogs, wolves, foxes, coyotes
  • Three Pinniped Families- live in marine
    environments, spend most of their time in water,
    but come ashore to sleep, mate, and give birth,
    large bodies are not a problem in water, blubber
    keeps them warm in cold water, awkward movement
    on land
  • Phocidae- true seals, no visible ear flaps
  • Otariidae- eared seals including the sea lion
  • Odobenidae- walrus
  • Other families include mongooses, meerkats,
    hyenas, weasels, wolverines, skunks, raccoons

8
Order Cetacea Aquatic Mammals
  • Do not come ashore
  • Still must surface to breath
  • Whales, dolphins, porpoises
  • 90 species

9
Order Cetacea
  • Whales are divided into two groups toothed
    whales and baleen whales
  • Toothed whales and dolphins use echolocation
  • Baleen whales filter invertebrates from the water
    with a net of baleen in their mouth
  • Largest creature on Earth, the great blue whale,
    is a baleen whale

10
Order Cetacea
  • Movement
  • Pair of pectoral flippers supported by bones
  • Pair of boneless tail flukes
  • Flukes move up and down rather than side to side
    like the caudal fin in fish

11
Order Sirenia
  • Manatees, dugongs, sea cows
  • 4 species
  • Herbivores feeding on underwater and floating
    foliage
  • Breathe through nostrils rather than blowholes
    like whales

12
Order Primates Erect Mammals
  • Great apes, monkeys, lemurs
  • Freely moving arms and legs with large hands and
    feet
  • Opposable thumbs for grasping items
  • Nails on most fingers and toes
  • Forward facing eyes, permitting binocular vision
    with depth perception
  • Poor sense of smell
  • Ability to walk erect when on land, though most
    of their time is spent in trees
  • A strong tendency to be social, often living in
    large groups
  • Less specialized teeth than those of most other
    mammals
  • A mostly vegetarian diet, possibly supplemented
    with eggs, insects, and occasionally other small
    animals

13
Order Primates
  • Chimpanzees are a type of ape, possibly the most
    intelligent animal
  • Some use tools and weapons
  • Some have been taught to communicate using sign
    language
  • Some show the ability to reason in order to solve
    problems

14
Order Artiodactyla Even-Toed Ungulates
  • Pigs, hippos, camel, giraffes, cows, deer, sheep,
    goats
  • Includes the ruminant suborder that chews the cud
  • Long legs with 2 or 4 functional hoofed toes
  • 210 species

15
Order Perissodactyla Odd-Toed Ungulates
  • Horse, donkey, zebra, rhinoceros
  • Herbivores
  • Rely on cecum rather than multichambered stomach
    to digest plant material hindgut fermenters

16
Order Edentata Toothless Mammals
  • Anteaters, armadillos, sloths
  • Anteaters are truly toothless
  • Others have peglike teeth, but lack enamel

17
Order Insectivora Insect-Eating Mammals
  • Hedgehogs, moles, shrews
  • 400 species
  • One of the least studies orders of mammals
  • Sharp conical cusps
  • Pointy flexible noses are common
  • Acute sense of smell

18
Order Proboscidea Trunked Mammals
  • Two species remain the African and Asian
    elephant
  • Mammoths and mastodons are extinct
  • Flexible and useful trunk, essentially an
    elongation of the nose and upper lip
  • Ivory tusks are the two upper incisors that
    continually grow
  • Other teeth are 4 brick-sized molars
  • African elephant is the largest terrestrial
    (land) animal

19
Order Chiroptera Flying Mammals
  • Only mammals capable of true flight
  • 900 species of bats
  • Megachiropterans in tropics and subtropics of
    Africa, Asia, and Australia can grow up to 5.6
    feet. They navigate by sight rather than sound
    and feed mainly on fruit and nectar
  • Microbats navigate using echolocation and feed on
    insects, fruit, nectar, sometimes fish and
    amphibians. The vampire bats in Central and South
    America do feed solely on blood
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