Technically known as the Delphinidae, this was named by John Edward Gray in 1821 as part of one of the earliest formal lists of mammal families. Gray's original definition basically included all toothed cetaceans other than narwhals and sperm whales, encompassing four genera, only one of which is still placed in the family today - Delphinus, from which it takes its name. He didn't list how many species he thought that genus contained, but it would certainly have included the two named by Linnaeus in 1758, and probably at least three others that had been described in the interim. Over the following decades, the number expanded considerably, with Gray himself identifying several of them, notably when he catalogued the observations and specimens collected by the Ross Expedition of 1839-43.
Sunday, 26 January 2025
Delphinid Dolphins
Of all mammal groups, those that have undergone the most dramatic change from their original form are perhaps the cetaceans. The most thoroughly adapted of all mammals to life in the water, there is little else they could possibly be mistaken for. The cetaceans have been considered a distinct order of mammals since the dawn of taxonomy in 1758, and today are divided into fourteen living families. The largest of these families, in terms of the number of species, is the dolphin family.
Sunday, 19 January 2025
Oligocene (Pt 13): The First Porcupines
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Prosotherium |
Much of it, but not all. The exact date of the oldest rodent fossil from South America has been disputed, but recent analysis suggests that it may have lived shortly after the beginning of the Oligocene. How it reached the continent is also unclear. Logically, it must have made a long sea journey, presumably clinging to some storm-tossed piece of debris, either from North America or Africa (the Atlantic being narrower then than it is now). The latter seems the more likely, since South American rodents are more closely related to the African sort than to their equivalent northern counterparts.
Sunday, 12 January 2025
The Struggles of a Pollinating Bat
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Note the dusting of pollen... |
Even aside from the obvious importance that this gives bats to the wider ecosystem, this can also have direct economic importance to we humans. For example, sour pitayas are an important cash crop in parts of Mexico. Similar to the much sweeter dragonfruit (although not closely related), they grow on a particular type of cactus that is native to the country but is also commonly cultivated. As it turns out, this cactus relies on bats for pollination. While they are not essential, crop yields drop by over a third when the bats are prevented from reaching them, which would clearly be devastating for a Mexican farmer who may be living on the edge of profitability to start with.
Sunday, 5 January 2025
Miniature Mediterranean Mammoths
Insular dwarfism is a phenomenon that has occurred many times throughout evolution. What happens is that a population of some large animal becomes trapped on an island, out of contact with its mainland kin., Because the island has a limited size, it also has a limited amount of food on it, and this is a problem for a large animal that needs plenty to eat,
If the island is particularly small, of course, the animals in question are likely to die out, if not immediately, then dwindling over a few generations until they lack the genetic diversity to sustain themselves. On the other hand, if the island is a large one (such as, say, Britain) then there may not be a problem at all, and nothing happens beyond the usual genetic drift between isolated populations.
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