Redirected from Monotremes
Monotremes are mammals that are best known for laying eggs, instead of giving birth to live young like marsupials and placental mammals (eutheria).
The word monotreme comes from the Greek words mono- and trema, meaning "one" and "hole." This name refers to the single opening monotremes have for excretion (solid and liquid) and reproduction.
Like other mammals, monotremes
The only surviving examples are all indigenous to Australia and New Guinea, though there is evidence that they were once more widespread. In 1991, a fossil tooth of a 61-million-year-old platypus was found in southern Argentina, (since named Monotrematum). In Australia, the earliest known marsupial fossils date to around 110 million years ago.
Living monotremes lack teeth as adults. Fossil forms and modern platypus young have the "tribosphenic" (three-cusped) molars which are one of the hallmarks of mammals. However, recent work suggests that monotremes acquired this form of molar independently of placental mammals and marsupials. [1] The jaw of monotremes is constructed somewhat differently from that of other mammals, and the jaw opening muscle is different. As in all true mammals, the tiny bones that conduct sound to the inner ear are fully incorporated into the skull, rather than lying in the jaw as in cynodonts and other pre-mammalian synapsids.
However, the external opening of the ear still lies at the base of the jaw. The monotremes also have extra bones in the shoulder girdle, including an interclavicle, which are not found in other mammals. Monotremes retain a reptile-like gait, with legs are on the sides of rather than underneath the body. The monotreme leg bears a spur in the ankle region; the spur is non-functional in echidnas, but contains a powerful venom in the male platypus.
The physiology of monotremes is equally unique. Their metabolic rate is remarkably low by mammalian standards, alhough the extent to which this is a characteristic of monotremes, as opposed to an adaptation on the part of the small number of surviving species to harsh environmental conditions, is uncertain.
Monotremes lay eggs. However, the egg is retained for some time within the mother, who actively provides the egg with nutrients. Monotremes also lactate, but have no defined nipples. All species are very long-lived, with low rates of reproduction and relatively prolonged parental care of infants.
Monotremes were very poorly understood for many years, and to this day some of the 19th century myths that grew up around them endure, particularly in the northern hemisphere. It is still sometimes thought, for example, that the monotremes are "inferior" or quasi-reptilian, and that they are a distant ancestor of the "superior" placental mammals. (In fact, it now seems plain that modern monotremes are the survivors of an early branching of the mammal tree; a later branching is thought to have led to the marsupial and placental groups.)
Similarly, it is still sometimes said that monotremes have less developed internal temperature control mechanisms than other mammals, but more recent research shows that monotremes maintain a constant body temperature in a wide variety of circumstances without difficulty. (Consider the case of a platypus living in an icy mountain stream.) Early researchers were misled by two factors. Monotremes maintain a lower average temperature than most placentals (around 32 degrees, as compared with about 35 for marsupials, 38 for most placentals, or 41 for typical birds). Secondly, the echidna (which is much easier to study than the reclusive platypus) only maintains normal temperature when it is active: during cold weather, an echidna conserves energy by "switching off" its temperature regulation.
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