Showing posts with label Monotremata. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monotremata. Show all posts

Sunday, May 4, 2025

[PaleoMammalogy • 2025] Bone Microstructure supports A Mesozoic Origin for a semiaquatic burrowing lifestyle in Monotremes (Mammalia)


Kryoryctes cadburyi  Pridmore, Rich, Vickers-Rich & Gambaryan, 2005

in Hand, Wilson, López-Aguirre, Houssaye, Archer, ... et Beck, 2025. 
Artwork by Peter Schouten.

Significance
The egg-laying monotremes have played a central role in our understanding of mammalian evolution, but their fossil record is poor and their evolutionary history is controversial. Living monotremes are ecologically very distinct from each other: The platypus is well adapted for a semiaquatic lifestyle, whereas echidnas are fully terrestrial. Here, we show that an isolated mammal humerus from the Early Cretaceous of Australia, from a species called Kryoryctes cadburyi, belongs to a monotreme, and that microscopic features of this bone indicate that this monotreme was a semiaquatic burrower. This suggests that the amphibious lifestyle of the modern platypus had its origins at least 100 Mya, during the Age of Dinosaurs, and that echidnas evolved from semiaquatic ancestors.

Abstract
The platypus and four echidna species are the only living egg-laying mammals and the sole extant representatives of Order Monotremata. The platypus and echidnas are very disparate both morphologically and ecologically: The platypus is a specialized semiaquatic burrowing form that forages for freshwater invertebrates, whereas echidnas are fully terrestrial and adapted for feeding on social insects and earthworms. It has been proposed that echidnas evolved from a semiaquatic, platypus-like ancestor, but fossil evidence for such a profound evolutionary transformation has been lacking, and this hypothesis remains controversial. Here, we present original data about the Early Cretaceous (108 to 103 Ma) Australian mammal Kryoryctes cadburyi, currently only known from a single humerus, that provides key information relating to this question. Phylogenetic analysis of a 536-character morphological matrix of mammaliaforms places Kryoryctes as a stem-monotreme. Three-dimensional whole bone comparisons show that the overall shape of the humerus is more similar to that of echidnas than the platypus, but analysis of microstructure reveals specializations found in semiaquatic mammals, including a particularly thick cortex and a highly reduced medullary cavity, present in the platypus but absent in echidnas. The evidence suggests Kryoryctes was a semiaquatic burrower, indicating that monotremes first evolved an amphibious lifestyle in the Mesozoic, and providing support for the hypothesis that this is ancestral for living monotremes as a whole. The lineage leading to the modern platypus appears to have been characterized by extremely long term (>100 My) niche conservatism, with echidnas representing a much later reversion to a fully terrestrial lifestyle.
 
An artist’s impression of Kryoryctes cadburyi.
Artwork by Peter Schouten.

 
Suzanne J. Hand, Laura A. B. Wilson, Camilo López-Aguirre , Alexandra Houssaye, Michael Archer, Joseph J. Bevitt, Alistair R. Evans, Amalia Y. Halim, Tzong Hung, Thomas H. Rich, Patricia Vickers-Rich and Robin M. D. Beck. 2025. Bone Microstructure supports A Mesozoic Origin for a semiaquatic burrowing lifestyle in Monotremes (Mammalia). PNAS. 122 (19) e2413569122. DOI: doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2413569122 


Monday, May 27, 2024

[PaleoMammalogy • 2024] Opalios splendens, Dharragarra aurora, Parvopalus clytiei, ... • A Diverse Assemblage of Monotremes (Monotremata) from the Cenomanian Lightning Ridge Fauna of New South Wales, Australia

  

Opalios splendens gen. et sp. nov.
Dharragarra aurora gen. et sp. nov.
Parvopalus clytiei gen. et sp. nov.

Flannery, McCurry, Rich, Vickers-Rich, Smith & Helgen, 2024
artwork: Peter Schouten.

Abstract
Six species of monotremes, three newly described here, occur in the Cenomanian fossil fauna from Lightning Ridge in northeastern New South Wales, Australia, making it the most diverse monotreme assemblage on record. Four species are known from a single specimen, suggesting that diversity remains underrepresented. No other mammal lineages are known from the deposit, although the absence of smaller taxa is likely due to sampling biases introduced by the opal mining process. Early-Late Cretaceous monotremes thus clearly diversified in Australia during the absence of other large-bodied mammalian competitors; and subsequently occupied a wider range of ecological niches than at any other time in their evolutionary history. One new taxon described herein represents a previously unknown monotreme family that combines marked elongation and torsion of the dentary with teinolophid character states, including the retention of five molars. Another shares dental features with ornithorhynchids, while the third is a possible diminutive steropodontid and simultaneously represents the smallest-bodied post-Barremian monotreme. Additional material of Steropodon galmani is also documented, confirming that a Meckelian groove is rudimentary or absent in this taxon, thus adding to the morphological understanding of this unusual monotreme. Lastly, we posit that the loss of teeth in ornithorhynchids may have occurred during the Pleistocene as a result of competition with aquatic hydromyin rodents dispersing to Australia from New Guinea.

Keywords: Mammal, opalized fossils, Late Cretaceous, Mesozoic, Eastern Gondwana


Systematic palaeontology
MAMMALIA Linnaeus, 1758
MONOTREMATA Bonaparte, 1837 or 1838

ORNITHORHYNCHOIDEA superfam. nov.

Diagnosis: Distinguished amongst other Monotremata by torsion of the dentary, whereby the lingual surface of the distal portions of the dentaries faces dorsally and are dorsoventrally flattened (except Tachyglossidae); and the distal portion of the masseteric canal being divided into three wide moieties (except Tachyglossidae).

OPALIONIDAE fam. nov.

Opalios splendens gen. et sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Differs from all monotremes except Teinolophos trusleri in possessing five molars rather than four or fewer (Fig. 2A, B). Differs from T. trusleri in being much larger and possessing: a lower ascending ramus; an articular facet below the level of the toothrow (Fig. 2C, D); a hemispherical depression for insertion of the masseteric musculature on the buccal side of the dentary (Fig. 2C, D); the anterior portion of the dentary twisted (torsion) such that the lingual surface faces dorsally and the anterior dentary is dorsoventrally flattened (Fig. 2A, B, E, F); a much reduced or absent Meckelian groove (Fig. 2E, F); an extremely dorsoventrally shallow mandibular symphysis (Fig. 2F). Differs from all other monotremes except stem and crown ornithorhynchids by exhibiting torsion of the horizontal ramus of the dentary. We consider Opalios splendens to be the basal-most diverging taxon within Ornithorhynchoidea.

Etymology: The genus name refers to ‘opal’ in Greek. The species name refers to the large size and spectacular translucency of the holotype (AM F132596–AM F132599), which provides views of its internal structure.


Family ?ORNITHORHYNCHIDAE Gray, Citation1825

Dharragarra aurora gen. et sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Differs from teinolophids in lacking a Meckelian groove, possessing dentary torsion and three molars, and in lacking diastemata between the premolars. Differs from kollikodontids in possessing an enlarged mandibular canal, in possessing three rather than four molars and in possessing dentary torsion. Differs from Steropodontids in possessing dentary torsion, having a dorsoventrally flattened dentary, and a more reduced posterior molar. Differs from Opalios splendens in having three molars rather than five, and in lacking diastemata between p1 and p2. Amongst ornithorhynchoids, Dharragarra aurora differs from the species of Obdurodon and Ornithorhynchus in having molars with two roots rather than more than two; from Patagorhynchus pascuali in being larger; from Monotrematum sudamericanum in being smaller.

Etymology: The genus name derives from ‘Dharragarra’, meaning platypus in the Gamilaraay, Yuwaalaraay and Yuwaalayaay languages (Ash et al. Citation2003). The species name is Latin for ‘dawn’.


STEROPODONTIDAE Archer, Flannery, Ritchie & Molnar, Citation1985

Steropodon galmani Archer, Flannery, Ritchie & Molnar, Citation1985

?STEROPODONTIDAE

Parvopalus clytiei gen. et sp. nov.

Etymology: Genus name is Latin for ‘small opal’. Species is named for Clytie Smith (Lightning Ridge), who has recovered many opal fossils at Lightning Ridge.

Six monotremes [100 million years ago] at Lightning Ridge, New South Wales, Australia;
clockwise from lower left: Opalios splendens; Stirtodon elizabethae, the largest monotreme of the time; Kollikodon ritchiei, with hot-cross-bun shaped molars; Steropodon galmani, now known from additional opalized fossils; Parvopalus clytiei, the smallest monotreme of the time; and Dharragarra aurora, the earliest known species of platypus.
artwork: Peter Schouten.

Conclusions: 
The co-occurrence of six morphologically distinct fossil mammal taxa (three named herein) in the Lightning Ridge faunal assemblage from the Finch Clay facies of the Griman Creek Formation provides the first indication that Australia was home to a hitherto cryptic diversity of monotremes during the mid-Cretaceous (as predicted by Darlington Citation1957).

• The newly described Opalios splendens is annectant between a teinolophid-like ancestral monotreme morphotype and more derived ornithorhynchoids.
Dharragarra aurora demonstrates that the lower molar formula typical of Cenozoic ornithorhynchids was established by the Cenomanian.
• New specimens of Steropodon galmani, along with the new small-bodied taxon, Parvopalus clytiei, expand current knowledge of morphological diversity in Cenomanian monotremes.
• The loss of teeth in ornithorhynchids may have been related to ecological displacement caused by the arrival of aquatic rodents in Australia during the Pleistocene.
 

Timothy F. Flannery, Matthew R. McCurry, Thomas H. Rich, Patricia Vickers-Rich, Elizabeth T. Smith and Kristofer M. Helgen. 2024. A Diverse Assemblage of Monotremes (Monotremata) from the Cenomanian Lightning Ridge Fauna of New South Wales, Australia. Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. DOI: 10.1080/03115518.2024.2348753 

Monday, February 20, 2023

[PaleoMammalogy • 2023] Patagorhynchus pascuali • First Monotreme from the Late Cretaceous of South America



Patagorhynchus pascuali
Chimento, Agnolín, Manabe, Tsuihiji, Rich, Vickers-Rich & Novas, 2023


Abstract
Monotremata is a clade of egg-lying mammals, represented by the living platypus and echidnas, which is endemic to Australia, and adjacent islands. Occurrence of basal monotremes in the Early Cretaceous of Australia has led to the consensus that this clade originated on that continent, arriving later to South America. Here we report on the discovery of a Late Cretaceous monotreme from southern Argentina, demonstrating that monotremes were present in circumpolar regions by the end of the Mesozoic, and that their distinctive anatomical features were probably present in these ancient forms as well.


Mammalia, Linnaeus 1758
Monotremata, Bonaparte, 1837

Patagorhynchus gen. nov. (monotypic genus)

Etymology: Patago, from Patagonia, and rhynchus, nose.

Diagnosis: Patagorhynchus differs from basal monotremaformes (including Steropodon) in having a dilambdodont crown morphology and a labial cingulid;12 dilambdodont disposition of cusps and crests on molar crown is shared with Teinolophos and ornithorhynchids; Patagorhynchus and ornithorhynchids differ from the basal monotremaformes Teinolophos in having notably low and mesiodistally expanded teeth with the anterior lobe (equivalent to trigonid) positioned lower than the posterior one (equivalent to talonid), in having talonid composed of two (rather than one) transverse lophids, and lacking a labial cingulid. The anterior cingulid of Patagorhynchus is wider than that in Teinolophos but narrower than that in Obdurodon. Patagorhynchus shares with the toothed monotremes Obdurodon and Monotrematum both lingual and buccal extremes of the V-shaped lobe (equivalent to trigonid) with one buccal and two lingual cusps, with the first being more elevated than the latter two, and a complete mid-valley. Patagorhynchus bears two roots on m2 (as also probably in Monotrematum) and differs from Obdurodon and Ornithorhynchus, in which more than 5 roots are present. The lobes of Patagorhynchus and Obdurodon show hypsodonty, in contrast with the much more brachyodont molariforms of Monotrematum. Patagorhynchus exhibits the following features that are lacking in other monotremes, and may be considered autapomorphic among monotremes: mid-valley labially diverges (i.e., the length of the labial edge of this valley represents two times its lingual length) and anterior cingulid labially narrow and does not reach the labial margin of the protoconid.


Patagorhynchus pascuali sp. nov.

Etymology: Species name honors the Argentine paleomammalogist Rosendo Pascual (1923–2012), who described the first Cenozoic monotreme remains from Patagonia, thus demonstrating the presence of this clade outside Australia.

Holotype: MPM-PV-23087, Museo Padre Molina (Rio Gallegos, Santa Cruz, Argentina), a right lower m2 attached to a fragment of dentary. Collected by N. R. Chimento during a joint Argentine-Japanese field trip in March 2022.

Type locality and age: La Anita farm, Santa Cruz Province, Patagonia, Argentina. The tooth was collected from the “Puma Cave” fossil site (S 50 30.639 W 72 33.617), Chorrillo Formation, early Maastrichtian7,8. This new discovery expands the list of Late Cretaceous mammaliaforms recorded in the Chorrillo Formation and equivalent Dorotea Formation in southern Chile, previously known to include gondwanatherians (Magallanodon) and dryolestoids (Orretherium).



Nicolás R. Chimento, Federico L. Agnolín, Makoto Manabe, Takanobu Tsuihiji, Thomas H. Rich, Patricia Vickers-Rich and Fernando E. Novas. 2023. First Monotreme from the Late Cretaceous of South America. Communications Biology. 6: 146. DOI: 10.1038/s42003-023-04498-7

Saturday, December 3, 2016

[Mammalogy • 1998] A Revision of the Genus Zaglossus (Monotremata, Tachyglossidae), with Description of New Species, Zaglossus attenboroughi, and Subspecies


Zaglossus attenboroughi 
Flannery & Groves, 1998  
 DOI:  
10.1515/mamm.1998.62.3.367  

Abstract
A systematic revision of monotremes of the genus Zaglossus has revealed unexpected morphological diversity. Statistical and non-metric analysis indicate that three species can be recognised: Zaglossus bruijnii (Peters and Doria, 1876), which inhabits the Vogelkop, Fak Fak and possibly the Charles Louis Mountains regions; Zaglossus bartoni Thomas, 1907, which occurs on the central cordillera between the Paniai Lakes and the Nanneau Range, as well as the Huon Peninsula; and Zaglossus attenboroughi n. sp. from the Cyclops Mountains. Four distinct subspecies of Z. bartoni can be discerned. The three subspecies inhabiting the central cordillera increase in size from east to west: Z. bartoni smeenki n. ssp. of the Nanneau Range being the smallest, the nominotypical form intermediate in size, and Z. bartoni diamondi n. ssp. the largest. Zaglossus b. clunius inhabits the Huon Peninsula.




 Flannery, T.F. and C.P. Groves. 1998. A Revision of the Genus Zaglossus (Monotremata, Tachyglossidae), with Description of New Species and Subspecies. Mammalia. 62(3); 387–390. DOI:  10.1515/mamm.1998.62.3.367 

Jonathan E.M. Baillie , S amuel T. Turvey and Carly Waterman. 2009. Survival of Attenborough’s long-beaked Echidna Zaglossus attenboroughi in New Guinea. Oryx. 43(1); 146–148. DOI:  10.1017/S0030605309002269

    

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

[PaleoMammalogy • 2013] Obdurodon tharalkooschild • A New, Giant Platypus (Monotremata, Ornithorhynchidae) from the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, Australia


Obdurodon tharalkooschild, a middle to late Cenozoic giant toothed platypus from the the World Heritage fossil deposits of Riversleigh, Australia. At about one meter (more than 3 feet) in length and with powerful teeth (inset: the holotype, a first lower molar), it would have been capable of killing much larger prey, such as lungfish and even small turtles, than its much smaller living relative.
 Illustration: Peter Schouten.






Fossil of Largest Known Platypus Discovered in Australia
  — No living mammal is more peculiar than the platypus. It has a broad, duck-like bill, thick, otter-like fur, and webbed, beaver-like feet. The platypus lays eggs rather than gives birth to live young, its snout is covered with electroreceptors that detect underwater prey, and male platypuses have a venomous spur on their hind foot. Until recently, the fossil record indicated that the platypus lineage was unique, with only one species inhabiting Earth at any one time. This picture has changed with the publication of a new study in the latest issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology that describes a new, giant species of extinct platypus that was a side-branch of the platypus family tree.

......................


Giant turtle-devouring duck-billed platypus discovered



Pian, R., M. Archer, and S.J. Hand. 2013. A New, Giant Platypus, Obdurodon tharalkooschild, sp. nov. (Monotremata, Ornithorhynchidae), from the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, Australia. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 33(6):1-5.