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Hoofed mammals

Hoofed mammals. Ungulates. Ungulates: Refer to mammals with hooves Artiodactyla: even toed Perissodactyla: odd toed. Hoofed mammals (ungulates). Order Perissodactyla. Order Artiodactyla. Weight shared between two central toes. Weight borne on one central toe. Hoof a modified nail?.

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Hoofed mammals

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  1. Hoofed mammals Ungulates

  2. Ungulates: Refer to mammals with hooves • Artiodactyla: even toed • Perissodactyla: odd toed

  3. Hoofed mammals (ungulates) Order Perissodactyla Order Artiodactyla Weight shared between two central toes Weight borne on one central toe

  4. Hoof a modified nail? Hooves, claws, and nails are all composed of two structures: the unguis (a scale-like plate; our finger- and toe-nails) and the subunguis (a softer layer, found as a very fine layer on the underside of our fingernails) which connect the unguis to the pad of the digit.

  5. Hoof a good modification? • Ungulates account for the majority of the herbivores in the world • Over 257 species

  6. Skulls of ungulates Perissodactyla Ovis - sheep Equus - horse Artiodactyla Sus - pig Camelus - camel

  7. Perissodactyla Contains17 Recent species in three families: Equidae (horses), Tapiridae (tapirs), Rhinocerotidae (rhinoceroses)

  8. Perissodactyls: Equidae examples Equus caballus Feral horse (Mustang) Przewalski’s Horse Equus asinus donkey 3 species Zebra

  9. Perrisodatyles are Herbivores • Unique digestive system and dentition to suit their diet. • Special bacteria in their intestines to digest cellulose.

  10. Horse skull Cusps of cheekteeth joined by ridges Long diastema Canines large in males, small or absent in females

  11. Equidae: True wild horses are called the Przewalski’s • Horses: • http://animal.discovery.com/videos/jaws-and-claws-2-wild-horses.html • True wild horses do not look like the domesticated horse which has been bred by humans for over 4,000 years.

  12. Equidae: Zebra’s 3 species: • Grevy’s • Plains • Mountain • http://animal.discovery.com/videos/growing-up-zebra-baby-zebra.html

  13. Perissodactyl: Tapiridae(Tapirs) • Diet: Herbivore • Average life span in the wild:25 to 30 years • Size:Height at shoulder, 29 to 42 inches • Weight:500 to 800 lbs • Status:Endangered

  14. Perissodactyl: Tapiridae = Tapirs Malayan Tapir Mountain Tapirs Lowland Tapir Bairds Tapir

  15. Perissodactyl: Rhinocerotidae (Rhinoceros) • STATUS:Endangered • DESCRIPTION: • There are five species of rhinos • The African species: white and black rhinos. • Asian rhinos include the Indian and the Javan • The five species range in weight from 750 pounds to 8,000 pounds and stand anywhere from four and a half to six feet tall.

  16. Perissodactyl: Rhinocerotidae • POPULATION: • Black Rhino: 2,400 
White Rhino: 7,500
Sumatran Rhino: 400
Javan Rhino: fewer than 100
Indian Rhino: more than 2,000

  17. Perissodactyl: Rhinocerotidae (Rhinoceros)

  18. Perissodactyl: Rhinocerotidae • LIFESPAN: 35 years. HABITAT: • Rhino habitat ranges from savannas to dense forests in tropical and subtropical regions.

  19. Artiodactyla • Artiodactyls are the most diverse, large, terrestrial mammals alive today. They are the fifth largest order of mammals, consisting of approximately 210 species.

  20. Suborders and families of Artiodactyla 1 Domestic Cow Ruminantia 2 Cape Buffalo Ruminantia 3 White-tailed Deer Ruminantia 4 Pygmy (Hippopotaminae) 5 Caribou Ruminantia 6 Giraffe Ruminantia 7Hippopotamus (Hippopotaminae) 8South American LamaTylopoda 9White-lipped PeccaryTayassuidae 10 Common Warthog Suidae 11Domestic Pig Suidae 12 Camel Tylopoda 13Collared PeccaryTayassuidae 14Bison Ruminantia (Bovidae)

  21. Artiodactyla Ruminants Upper incisors absent, replaced in life by a hard pad on which lower incisors bite Suiformes (non ruminants) Male canines curl upward

  22. Artiodactyla: Herbivores • Artiodactyla are also herbivores • Most are Ruminants • Digestion in ruminants occurs sequentially in a four-chambered stomach

  23. Compared to the perissodactyla Artiodactyla have cloven feet. Why the difference?

  24. artiodactyls - 1 Cervus timorensis - rusa Capra hircus – goat Camelus dromedarius – camel Sus scrofa – pig

  25. Antilope cervicapra - blackbuck artiodactyls - 2 Bos taurus x Bos indicus – cattle Bubalus bubalis – buffalo Bos javanicus – banteng

  26. And finally, Cetacea Two suborders: • Mysticeti • Baleen whales • Right whales • Rorquals • Odontoceti • Toothed whales • Sperm whales • Dolphins

  27. How can whales be related to artiodactyla? • Astragali of the Eocene protocetids (left) and Artiocetus clavis (right), as compared to that of the pronghorn Antilocapra americana (centre). Note the distinct double-pulley shape.

  28. Molecular evidence now indicates clearly that cetaceans are actually artiodactyls that have become totally aquatic

  29. Balaenopteridae - Rorquals Mysticeti Balaenidae – Right whales Megaptera novaeangliae - Humpback Balaena australis Southern Right While Balaenoptera physalus – Fin whale

  30. Baleen is used to filter plankton Long, fine baleen of Blue Whale, suitable for filtering krill (tiny crustaceans) Baleen hangs down from palate Short, coarse baleen of Minke Whale, suitable for trapping small fish

  31. Balaenoptera musculus – Blue whale Grooves on throat of rorquals are normally pulled tight to make mouth into a beak But when feeding, the whale relaxes the grooves and takes in gallons of water, which it pushes through the baleen and expels, filtering out the prey

  32. Odontoceti – toothed whales Delphinus delphis – Common dolphin Orcinus orca – Orca or Killer whale Homodont (teeth all alike) usually dozens in each jaw Physeter macrocephalus – Sperm whale Sperm whale tooth

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