18
CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

CETACEAQuintessential Mammals?

Mammalogy – EEOB 625

27 February 2004

Page 2: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Origins & Evolution: Another problem in macroevolution

• Were the first cetaceans herbivores or carnivores?

• Order Condylartha: ancestor to several ungulate taxa and cetaceans

• Pakicetus: an archaeocete of the Eocene, primitive? Heterodont, Skull not telescoped

• Neomorphic structures: tail fluke, dorsal fin

Page 3: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Horse

Archaeocete

Odontocete

MysticeteFeldhamer 16.4, see Vaughan Fig. 13-5

Page 4: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Adaptive Zones of Odontoceti and Mysticeti

• Body Size, Habitat, & Feeding specializations

• Advantages & disadvantages of large size?

• Seasonal & geographic variation in zooplankton as a food resource

• Food, migration, reproduction: Why might whales (mysticetes) be quintessential mammals?

1.__________, 2 ___________, 3___________• Relative success of the two suborders

Page 5: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Fig. 16.7Feldhamer

Page 6: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

McVay, Am. Sci 61:24

Page 7: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Phylogeny & Classification of Odontoceti and Mysticeti

• Origin and evolution of cetaceans cladogram/ phylogeny Fig. 13-9• Is Cetacea a monophyletic taxon?• Are the two suborders valid taxa?

Probably, but are sperm whales and humpback whales closely related?

Relative “success” of the two suborders

Page 8: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Suborder Mysticeti • Baleen: What is it?

Feeding behavior & adaptations of the 3 families:

• Balaenidae – swim & skim

• Balaenopteridae – gulp & strain

• Eschrichtiidae – strain sediments

Page 9: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Fig. 16.9, Feldhamer

Minke Gray

Blue

Size & shape of baleen plates

Bowhead

Page 10: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Fig 4. McVey

Balaenidae

Page 11: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Balaenopteridae

grand gulpers

Page 12: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Eschrichtiide

Feeds on benthic invertebrates

National Geographic

Page 13: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004
Page 14: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Suborder Odontoceti • Most diverse and abundant• Delphinidae ‑ 32 species, marine & freshwater (river) species• Physeteridae ‑ sperm whales and whale strandings• What about Plantanistidae?

Page 15: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Fig. 16.11, Feldhamer

Page 16: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

Physeteridae

Sperm whale Nat’l Geographic, 150:722a

Page 17: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004
Page 18: CETACEA Quintessential Mammals? Mammalogy – EEOB 625 27 February 2004

The End

Evolution & Systematics