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Comparative Biology and Evolutionary Relationships of Tree Shrews

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Tree shrews are small-bodied, scansorial, squirrel-like mammals that occupy a wide range of arboreal, semi-arboreal, and forest floor niches in Southeast Asia and adjacent islands. Comparative aspects of tree shrew biology have been the subject of extensive investigations during the past two decades. These studies were initiated in part because of the widely accepted belief that tupaiids are primitive primates, and, as such, might provide valuable insight into the evolutionary origin of complex patterns of primate behavior, locomotion, neurobiology, and reproduction. During the same period, there has been a renewed interest in the methodology of phylogenetic reconstruction and in the use of data from a variety of biological disciplines to test or formulate hypotheses of evolutionary relationships. In particular, interest in the com parative and systematic biology of mammals has focused on analysis of phy logenetic relationships among Primates and a search for their closest relatives. Assessment of the possible primate affinities of tree shrews has comprised an important part of these studies, and a considerable amount of dental, cranio skeletal, neuroanatomical, reproductive, developmental, and molecular evi dence has been marshalled to either corroborate or refute hypotheses of a special tupaiid-primate relationship. These contrasting viewpoints have re sulted from differing interpretations of the basic data, as well as alternative approaches to the evolutionary analysis of data.

List of contents

1 The Suggested Evolutionary Relationships and Classification of Tree Shrews.- 2 Cranioskeletal Features in Tupaiids and Selected Eutheria as Phylogenetic Evidence.- 3 Tupaiid Affinities: The Evidence of the Carotid Arteries and Cranial Skeleton.- 4 Evolution and Diversification of the Archonta in an Arboreal Milieu.- 5 The Tupaiid Dentition.- 6 Siwalik Fossil Tree Shrews.- 7 The Nervous System of the Tupaiidae: Its Bearing on Phyletic Relationships.- 8 The Use of Reproductive and Developmental Features in Assessing Tupaiid Affinities.- 9 Molecular Evidence for the Affinities of Tupaiidae.- 10 Tupaiid and Archonta Phytogeny: The Macromolecular Evidence.

Product details

Assisted by W. Patrick Luckett (Editor), Patrick Luckett (Editor), W Patrick Luckett (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 25.07.2013
 
EAN 9781468410532
ISBN 978-1-4684-1053-2
No. of pages 314
Weight 640 g
Illustrations XV, 314 p.
Series Advances in Primatology
Advances in Primatology
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Zoology

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