- Source: Hystricomorpha
Hystricomorpha (from Greek ὕστριξ, hystrix 'porcupine' and Greek μορφή, morphē 'form') is a term referring to families and orders of rodents which has had many definitions throughout its history. In the broadest sense, it refers to any rodent (except dipodoids) with a hystricomorphous zygomasseteric system. This includes the Hystricognathi, Ctenodactylidae, Anomaluridae, and Pedetidae. Molecular and morphological results suggest the inclusion of the Anomaluridae and Pedetidae in Hystricomorpha may be suspect. Based on Carleton & Musser 2005, these two families are discussed here as representing a distinct suborder Anomaluromorpha.
Classification
The modern definition of Hystricomorpha, also known as Entodacrya or Ctenohystrica, is a taxonomic hypothesis uniting the gundis with the hystricognath rodents. Considerable morphological and strong molecular support exists for this relationship. If true, this hypothesis renders the traditional view of Sciurognathi invalid, as it becomes a paraphyletic group.
The hystricomorph rodents, or at least members of Caviomorpha, are sometimes not regarded as rodents. Most molecular and genetic research, however, confirms the monophyly of rodents. Support for rodent polyphyly appears to be a product of long branch attraction.
Hystricomorph rodents appeared in South America in the Eocene, a continent which previously had metatherians, xenarthrans, and meridiungulates as the only resident nonflying mammals. They apparently arrived by rafting across the Atlantic from Africa. The same type of migration may have occurred with primates, which also appeared in South America in the Eocene when it was an isolated continent, long before the Great American Interchange. All of this is still controversial, and new scientific discoveries on this subject are published regularly.
Families
The following list of families is based on the taxonomy of Marivaux et al. 2002 and Marivaux, Vianey-Liaud & Jaeger 2004, who subjected a number of early fossil rodents to parsimony analysis and recovered support for the Hystricomorpha or Entodacrya hypothesis. Their results rendered the suborder Sciuravida as defined by McKenna & Bell 1997 to be polyphyletic and invalid. The symbol "†" is used to indicate extinct groups.
Suborder Hystricomorpha
†Pseudoneoreomys?
Superfamily Ctenodactyloidea
†Chapattimyidae
Ctenodactylidae – gundis
Diatomyidae – Laotian rock rat
†Tamquammyidae
†Yuomyidae
Hystricognathiformes
†Tsaganomyidae
Hystricognathi – true hystricognaths
†Baluchimyinae
Phiomorpha
Bathyergidae – blesmols
†Bathyergoididae
†Diamantomyidae
Heterocephalidae – naked mole-rats
Hystricidae – Old World porcupines
†Kenyamyidae
†Myophiomyidae
Petromuridae – dassie rat
†Phiomyidae
Thryonomyidae – cane rats
Caviomorpha – New World hystricognaths
Superfamily Cavioidea
Caviidae – cavies, capybaras, and guinea pigs
†Cephalomyidae
Cuniculidae – pacas
Dasyproctidae – agoutis and acouchis
Dinomyidae – pacarana
†Eocardiidae
†Neoepiblemidae
Superfamily Chinchilloidea
Abrocomidae – chinchilla rats
Chinchillidae – chinchillas and viscachas
Superfamily Erethizontoidea
Erethizontidae – New World porcupines
Superfamily Octodontoidea
Capromyidae – hutias
Ctenomyidae – tuco-tucos
Echimyidae – spiny rats
†Heptaxodontidae – giant hutias
Myocastoridae – nutria
Octodontidae – degus and relatives
Citations
General references
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Hewan pengerat
- Landak
- Landak dunia lama
- Tikus batu laos
- Tikus sisir
- Cavia
- Diatomyidae
- Hystricomorpha
- Rodent
- List of critically endangered mammals
- List of mammal genera
- Capybara
- List of endangered mammals
- Common degu
- Porcupine
- Hystricognathi
- List of least concern mammals