It should come as no surprise that members of the family are noted for their ability to survive in arid environments with minimal water. They are, for example, more efficient at absorbing water from their stomach than ruminants such as cattle and deer, and genetically resistant to heat stress and ultraviolet radiation. Nonetheless, while the word "camel" doubtless conjures up an image of one or more of the three Old World species (that is, the dromedary and the wild and domesticated versions of the Bactrian camel), the family also includes those four American species.
Synapsida
A random wander through the world of mammals
Sunday, 28 June 2026
The History of South American Camels
Sunday, 21 June 2026
The Genomics of Yellow Bats
In terms of species, bats are the second-largest order of mammals, after the rodents. New species are identified all the time, due in part to the relative difficulty of closely examining night-flying mammals, many of which sleep in hard-to-access caves. The current total stands at over a thousand, representing over 20% of all known mammal species.
Within this huge group, there is, perhaps, rather more diversity than many people realise. While bats have probably not received the same level of attention as some other mammal groups, scientists have nonetheless long attempted to disentangle the relationships between all these subgroups. (Also, when I say they have received less attention, there's a mammal-centric bias here; it's probably still a lot better than, say lizards, let alone millipedes or the like).
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Euplerids: Falanoucs and Fanalokas
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| Fanaloka |
Two of these were, so far as anyone could tell from their physical appearance and habits, civets. They were often placed in their own subfamily, reflecting their distance from other civets, but nonetheless, they were thought to belong among the viverrids. Following genetic studies in 2003, however, it became clear that they belonged in the same group as (i.e. shared a unique common ancestor with) the Madagascan "mongooses". Since some of them clearly weren't mongooses, and since they had diverged from the real ones so long ago, the subfamily was split off and promoted to full family level, now including both the mongoose-like and civet-like species.
Sunday, 7 June 2026
Eocene (Pt 4): Ancient Beasts of the European Archipelago
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| Propalaeotherium |
Hyracotherium was long regarded as the earliest known member of the horse family. In recent decades, it has become apparent that it wasn't really a horse, in the sense that modern horses don't descend from it or its relatives, and today we call the family it belonged to the palaeotheres. The North American Eohippus, on the other hand, despite long being thought to be identical to Hyracotherium, probably is a horse. The confusion between the two means that it's often difficult to tell which is being referred to in older sources.
Saturday, 30 May 2026
Looking for Leaves: the Travel Routines of a Koala
Thus, it can be important to know not merely which habitats a particular species of animal prefers, but how it moves about within that habitat to use to its best advantage. Does it tend to revisit particular patches of ground, and if so, how often? A herbivore, after all, wouldn't want to head back to a given place before whatever it had eaten there had had a chance to regrow.
Sunday, 24 May 2026
Euplerids: The Not-Mongooses of Madagascar
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| Ring-tailed vontsira |
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