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Chapter 43 Mammals Section 3 Diversity of Mammals.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 43 Mammals Section 3 Diversity of Mammals."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 43 Mammals Section 3 Diversity of Mammals

2 Mammalian Orders Mammals are classified into a single order of monotremes, 7 orders of marsupials, & about 18 orders of placental mammals

3 Monotremes Order Monotremata Egg-laying mammals Duckbill platypus- Australia- water resistent fur, webbed feet & flattened tail Spiny anteater- Australia- feed on ants & insects- sticky tongue

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5 Marsupials Order Marsupialia Majority live in Australia, and some live in New Guinea Virginia opossum- only marsupial in USA Have pouch to raise young in

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7 Placental Mammals Nearly 95% of all mammalian species are placental mammals

8 Order Xenarthra Anteaters, armadillos, & sloths Location: N. America, C. America, & S. America Xenarthra- “strange joints” Feed on insects or plants

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10 Order Lagomorpha Rabbits, hares, & pikas Double row of upper incisors, with two large front teeth backed by two smaller ones Teeth grow throughout lifetime & adapted to herbivorous diet

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12 Order Rodentia Rodents: squirrels, marmots, chipmunks, gophers, muskrats, porcupines, mice, & rats Rodent’s teeth consist of a few molars or premolars and two pairs of incisors that grow all of the rodent’s life

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14 Order Primates Lemurs, tarsiers, monkeys, gibbons, apes, & humans Omnivores; large brains Forward-facing eyes for depth perception Grasping hands, feet, and tails

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16 Order Chiroptera Mammals that truly fly- bats Wing- modified front limb with a membrane of skin that stretches between digits Use thumbs for walking, climbing, & grasping Small eyes & large ears for echolocation- active at night

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18 Order Insectivora Shrews, hedgehogs, & moles N. America, Africa, & Europe Most have long, pointed noses that help them probe the soil for insects Have sharp teeth to grasp & pierce prey

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20 Order Carnivora Animals that eat meat- carnivores Dogs, cats, raccoons, bears, hyenas, otters, seals, & sea lions Strong sense of smell and sight Strong jaws, large teeth, clawed toes Aquatic carnivores- pinnipeds- sea lions, seals, walruses

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22 Order Artiodactyla Hoofed animals- ungulates Ungulates with even number of toes- artiodactyls- deer, cattle, giraffes, pigs, and camels Herbivores- most have rumen Molars are flat and large for grinding plants

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24 Order Perissodactyla Ungulates with an odd number of toes- perissodactyls Horses, zebras, rhinoceros, & tapirs Location: Africa & Asia Have a cecum

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26 Order Cetacea Whales, dolphins, porpoises Lack hind-limbs, have tails Totally aquatic, but evolved from land Breathe through modified nostrils- blowhole Use echolocation to locate prey, navigate, & communicate Toothed whales- dolphins, orcas, sperm whale

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28 Order Sirenia Manatees and dugongs Herbivores Location: tropical seas, estuaries, and rivers Closely related to elephants- evolutionary speaking

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30 Order Proboscidea Asian and African Elephant Largest living land mammal African elephant- 13,200 lbs Feed on plants for 18 hours each day Nose is modified into trunk for grasping “proboscis”

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32 Other Orders The 12 orders just described include most of the familiar placental mammals. The 6 remaining orders contain just 1% of the mammalian species.

33 REVIEW!!! Which continent is a natural home of both monotremes and marsupials? Compare manatees to toothed whales.


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