Sunday, 4 May 2025

Delphinids: Small Dolphins of Shallow Southern Seas

Commerson's dolphin
While related, dolphins and porpoises are regarded as distinct types of animals. Each is placed in its own family, with the two separating at least 15 million years ago. However, telling the two apart is not always easy, at least on a superficial look at their external anatomy. Porpoises are, generally speaking, smaller than dolphins and they have a blunt nose rather than a 'beak'. The problem is that we can say exactly the same about some species that really are dolphins.

In 1766, naturalist Philibert Commerson accompanied explorer Louis-Antoine de Bougainville on what would become the first successful French circumnavigation of the globe. While passing through the Straits of Magellan the following year, he spotted an unusual-looking dolphin close to the ship and sent a description of it back to France. (As a side note, later on in the voyage, it was discovered, much to the crew's shock, that Commerson's assistant was secretly a woman; she is now remembered as the first woman to circumnavigate the globe).

Sunday, 27 April 2025

Cheating Little Vixens

The majority of mammal species are either polygynous, where one dominant male mates with multiple females, or promiscuous, where both sexes have multiple partners. However, while monogamy may be less common, it isn't exactly rare, either, with it having evolved several times in widely separated mammalian groups. In some cases, this is what we would term "facultative" monogamy, where animals (often large predators) are sufficiently widely spaced that it's simply difficult for a male to find multiple partners, or, if he can, they live sufficiently far apart that he can't plausibly defend more than one of them from his rivals. In others, monogamy is an essential part of the breeding process, typically because the young are too much effort for one parent to raise alone.

Sunday, 20 April 2025

Delphinids: White-sided Dolphins

Atlantic white-sided dolphin
The taxonomy of dolphins is far from settled, with exactly how we should classify some species having been an open question for years. There is a good chance that the scientific names I am using for some species in this series will not still be in use in a decade, as old genera are split and the family tree re-arranged. Such is the case, for example, with the dolphins of the genus Lagenorhynchus.

The genus was named by John Edward Gray in 1846 for a specimen of a previously unknown species sent to him for analysis at the British Museum, after having been caught somewhere off the coast of Norfolk. It translates as "bottle-nose", for the shape of the beak... which is, perhaps, unfortunate, given that the animal we refer to in English as the "bottlenose dolphin" is something else entirely. Over the centuries since, five new species have been added to the genus, giving us the six we recognise today.

Sunday, 13 April 2025

The Diets of Parallel Pigs

Peccaries from South America
The word "ungulate" refers to a broad category of mammals that are generally large and herbivorous. They form a natural evolutionary group, although only if you include the cetaceans, which are descended from vaguely hippo-like ancestors. The word comes from the Latin word for "hoof", and the great majority of living ungulates have hooves of one kind or another. Even ignoring the cetaceans there are exceptions, but it doesn't take a great stretch of the imagination to see that camels, for instance, are at least the same general kind of animal as deer or cows.

All living ungulates can be placed into one of two mammalian orders: the artiodactyls, which includes the cloven-footed kinds, and the perissodactyls, which includes, among others, the horses. If you start looking at fossils, however, it becomes clear that other ungulate orders once existed. Most were very early, dying out in the first half of the Age of Mammals, representing early branches in the great ungulate family tree that ultimately proved unsuccessful.

Sunday, 6 April 2025

Of Pregnancy and Progesterone

Female mammals, like those of many other creatures, are not permanently fertile. Instead, they go through regular cycles, ovulating at intervals under the control of hormonal signals produced by the pituitary gland and the ovaries. In humans, this manifests as the menstrual cycle, but this is a relatively unusual feature of our species.

Whether or not other mammals menstruate may depend on your exact definition of the term. Chimpanzees certainly do (and, indeed, rarely experience menopause), and it's present to a variable extent in other apes and Old World monkeys. In New World monkeys it's microscopic and it's completely absent in lemurs. At least some bats menstruate, as do sengis (elephant shrews) and, so far as we know, just one species of rodent.

Saturday, 29 March 2025

The Earliest Landfowl

Gallinuloides
This post will be the latest as of 1st April, so if you've been following this blog for a while, you'll know what that means... 

The humble chicken (Gallus domesticus) is a member of the pheasant family. This is a moderately-sized family, with around 180 species. Alongside the chicken and its wild ancestor, this also includes, not just pheasants, but many similar ground-dwelling birds, such as grouse, partridges, true quails, turkeys, and peacocks. 

It is, in turn, a part of a larger taxonomic group technically referred to as the Galliformes, or more commonly the "landfowl". The other four living families in this order have fewer species and are generally less well-known, but they share the same features of being generally plump, often quite large by avian standards, and having short, rounded wings unsuited for long-distance flight. 

Sunday, 23 March 2025

Delphinids: Humpback Dolphins

Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin
The genus Stenella, to which many of the closest relatives of the well-known bottlenose and common dolphins belong is, genetically speaking, a mess. A combination of interbreeding and rapid speciation have made it very difficult to determine how its family tree should be constructed or if, indeed, there is even a clear pattern to find. 

Our best evidence suggests that it probably isn't a "real" group, in the sense of one consisting of a common ancestor and all of its descendants. That's because three other genera of dolphin appear to be descended from that common ancestor, forming part of the same cluster of what we might describe as "typical-looking" dolphins. The common and bottlenose dolphins form two of these interspersed groups, while the third is represented by the humpback dolphins.

As it turns out, their classification has also had to undergo significant revision in recent years, albeit for different reasons.