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“The non-cetacean section of the composite phylogenetic hypothesis for Artiodactyla. Thickened colored bars above branches (A–C) mark optimizations of various evolutionary changes on the lineage that leads to Cetacea (see Table 1). Gray bars above branches (1–3) indicate character state changes that are interpreted as convergences between early stem whales (see Fig. 9) and mesonychians. Thick branches connect extant taxa in the tree, and thin branches represent extinct lineages. The small, inset tree delimits (in gray) the section of the overall composite topology (Fig. 7) that is shown here at a larger scale. Approximate evolutionary time-scale, in millions of years, is at the base of the figure. Relationships derived from the Artiodactyla supermatrix are based on a strict consensus of trees. Artwork is by Carl Buell.”
A phylogenetic blueprint for a modern whale. Gatesy J, Geisler JH, Chang J, Buell C, Berta A, Meredith RW, Springer MS, McGowen MR. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2012 Oct 26. pii: S1055-7903(12)00418-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2012.10.012. (pdf)
Posted on February 27, 2013 with 52 notes
Source: sciencedirect.com
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‘The phylogenetic position of Cetacea relative to other extant artiodactyls’
‘Artwork is by Carl Buell. (For interpretation of the references to color in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)’
A phylogenetic blueprint for a modern whale. Gatesy J, Geisler JH, Chang J, Buell C, Berta A, Meredith RW, Springer MS, McGowen MR. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2012 Oct 26. pii: S1055-7903(12)00418-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2012.10.012. (pdf)
Posted on February 6, 2013 with 225 notes
Source: sciencedirect.com
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The selenodont artiodactyls of the Uinta Eocene by BioDivLibrary on Flickr.
Philadelphia :Wagner Free Institute of Science,1899.
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/40581365 -
n134_w1150 by BioDivLibrary on Flickr.
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The selenodont artiodactyls of the Uinta Eocene by BioDivLibrary on Flickr.
Philadelphia :Wagner Free Institute of Science,1899.
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/40581373 -
n142_w1150 by BioDivLibrary on Flickr.
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Ambulocetus
Reconstructions by Carl Buell
When: Eocene (~50 to 48 million years ago)
Where: Pakistan
What: Ambulocetus is fossil whale relative. This beast was about 10 feet (~3 meters) long, and not very agile in either the land or the water. It was capable of movement on land, but it would have been rather slow and lumbering, as its forelimbs were shortened compared to its fully terrestrial ancestors. In the water it would have been capable of swimming with some speed, but it would not have been able to make quick turns as it chased its prey. Therefore, it has been reconstructed as an ambush-style predator, in the same niche as the modern crocodile. It would have laid in wait in the water, with its relatively dorsal eyes and nose peeking above the sufrace, able to see and smell approaching prey. Once a prey animal got close enough, Ambulocetus would launch itself from the water and try to catch the animal in its powerful jaws, such as is shown above. I think it is some form of basal horse that is trying to avoid the snapping jaws of Ambulocetus. This ambush style strategy could have also worked with aquatic prey, such as schools of fish. Ambush predation is seen in some species of whales today, Orcas (the killer whales) have been recorded ambushing seals on ice flows.
Ambulocetus lived on the edge of the Tethys Sea (a body of water between India and Asia) in what is now Pakistan. At the time this region was one of many islands off the shore of the island continent of India, which had not yet collided with Asia (this would not happen for tens of millions of years). This warm seaway was full of mammals starting to return to the seas, including other lineages of whale relatives. In the cetacean family tree, Ambulocetus falls between Indohyus and modern whales; it was carnivorous - as all modern whales are-, and far more adapted for aquatic locomotion than Indohyus was, with shortened legs and a much more powerful tail.
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Animal Drawing by American Museum of Natural History on Flickr.
Giant Eland (Taurotragus derbianus) by George Corbin
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Palatal aspect of skull of Elk (Alces alces)
Catalogue of the ungulate mammals in the British Museum (Natural History) / by R. Lydekker.
Posted on February 15, 2012 with 82 notes
Source: biodiversitylibrary.org











