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Four - Terrestrial Mammals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 April 2023

Norman Maclean
Affiliation:
University of Southampton

Summary

Mammals are among the most recognisable and most threatened organisms on Earth. There are more than 6000 living species, ranging from the big (rhinoceroses) to the small (rats), the wondrous to the weird (even venomous, too!) (Figure 4.1). While mammals face accelerating extinction risks as human populations grow and alter the landscapes and climates of the world, hope for survival remains through productive collaborations between scientists, governments and most importantly, local communities and stakeholders.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 4.1 Evolutionary relationships of all living mammal groups by Order and Superorder, built using the VertLife mammal tree of 4098 species for which DNA sequences are available (Upham et al., 2019). One species was chosen to represent each extant order (27 total) from the maximum clade-credibility topology of the fossil node-dated phylogeny.

Phylogeny provided by N. Upham and animal silhouettes courtesy of Phylopic users, including licenses from the public domain (Steven Traver, Daniel Stadtmauer, Gavin Prideaux, Xavier A. Jenkins, Yan Wong, Pearson Scott Foresman, ‘An Ignorant Atheist’, Jiro Wada, T. Michael Keesey, Jody Taylor, Margot Michaud) and CCA 3 Unported (Roberto Sibaja, Sarah Werning).
Figure 1

Figure 4.2 Percentage of mammal species, by order, listed as Data Deficient, Critically Endangered and Endangered by IUCN.

Animal silhouettes courtesy of Phylopic users, including licenses from the public domain (Steven Traver, Daniel Stadtmauer, Gavin Prideaux, Xavier A. Jenkins, Yan Wong, Pearson Scott Foresman, ‘An Ignorant Atheist’, Jiro Wada, T. Michael Keesey, Jody Taylor, Margot Michaud) and CCA 3 Unported (Roberto Sibaja, Sarah Werning).
Figure 2

Figure 4.3(A) Eastern gorilla, Gorilla beringei, Critically Endangered (K. Solari).

Figure 3

Figure 4.3(B) Social tuco-tuco, Ctenomys sociabilis, Critically Endangered (J. Hsu).

Figure 4

Figure 4.3(C) Jamaican flower bat, Phyllonycteris aphylla, Critically Endangered (A. Soto-Centeno).

Figure 5

Figure 4.3(D) Giraffe, Giraffa camelopardalis, Vulnerable (K. Solari).

Figure 6

Figure 4.3(E) African bush elephant, Loxodonta africana, Vulnerable (K. Solari).

Figure 7

Figure 4.4(A) Kenny, a captive white tiger (Panthera tigris), was born with skull and jaw malformities due to inbreeding. While most tigers with this appearance would have been euthanised, Kenny was rescued by Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge (https://www.turpentinecreek.org/).

Figure 8

Figure 4.4(B) Sacred sika deer (Cervus nippon), with antlers removed, peruse a store and are tolerated by the shop owner in Nara, Japan (A. Mychajliw).

Figure 9

Figure 4.4(C) A female Hispaniolan solenodon (Solenodon paradoxus) killed by a dog near Puerto Escondido, Dominican Republic – extended teats suggest that she was nursing (A. Mychajliw).

Figure 10

Figure 4.4(D) A pika (Ochotona roylei) in Spiti Valley, Himachal Pradesh, India, stuck between a rock and a hard place – rising temperatures and high elevation hypoxia (K. Solari).

Figure 11

Figure 4.4(E) Despite their abundance in places such as Costa Rica, Xenarthrans such as the northern tamandua (Tamandua mexicana) remain understudied (K. Solari).

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