Tarsipedidae Gervais and Verreaux, 1842

Beck, Robin M. D., Voss, Robert S. & Jansa, Sharon A., 2022, Craniodental Morphology And Phylogeny Of Marsupials, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (457), pp. 1-353 : 242-244

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090.457.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7036173

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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EFDD5D-F6C9-68DD-D8DF-FB3E1B24F90D

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scientific name

Tarsipedidae Gervais and Verreaux, 1842
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Tarsipedidae Gervais and Verreaux, 1842 View in CoL

CONTENTS: Tarsipes (fig. 49).

STEM AGE: 27.1 Mya (95% HPD: 24.9–29.6 Mya).

CROWN AGE: N/A.

UNAMBIGUOUS CRANIODENTAL AUTAPOMORPHIES: Nasals very broad posteriorly, contacting lacrimals on each side (char. 2: 1→0; ci = 0.667); one lacrimal foramen usually present (char. 10: 0→1; ci = 0.063); jugal terminates well anterior to glenoid region (char. 21: 0→1; ci = 1.000); transverse canal foramen absent (char. 51: 1→0; ci = 0.200); auditory bulla large, contacting rostral tympanic process of petrosal (char. 55: 3→2; ci = 0.300); ectotympanic forms a closed tube that completely encircles the ear canal (char. 58: 0→1; ci = 0.167); anterior limb of ectotympanic loosely attached to the petrosal or squamosal behind postglenoid process (char. 59: 2→1; ci = 0.214); tensor tympani muscle enclosed ventrally by a bridge of bone derived from petrosal (char. 70: 0→1; ci = 1.000); postglenoid process of squamosal absent (char. 75: 0→1; ci = 0.200); postglenoid vein exits skull via the postglenoid foramen above the ear region, posterior or posteromedial to the glenoid fossa (char. 77: 1→0; ci = 0.250); zygomatic epitympanic sinus absent (char. 85: 1→0; ci = 0.500); only one hypoglossal foramen present (char. 92: 0→1; ci = 0.500); mandible much reduced and splintlike, lacking coronoid and angular processes (char. 96: 0→1; ci = 1.000); masseteric fossa perforated by a large unossified vacuity (char. 99: 1→3; ci = 0.333); and postcanine teeth are featureless spicules (char. 113: 0→1; ci = 1.000).

COMMENTS: Aplin and Archer (1987: lii) aptly described Tarsipes rostratus , the only known tarsipedid, as the “paragon of autapomorphic specialisation within Diprotodontia ,” and we identify a correspondingly long list of craniodental apomorphies characterizing this taxon, many of which are unique to Tarsipes within Metatheria. There is no known fossil record of Tarsipes prior to the latest Pleistocene ( Balme et al., 1978; Archer, 1984c; Brammall and Archer, 1999; Long et al., 2002; Archer and Hand, 2006) despite the inferred antiquity of the tarsipedid lineage, which we estimate to have diverged from other petauroids during the Oligocene. However, it is possible that at least some of the specialized features of Tarsipes arose comparatively recently, such that plesiomorphic tarsipedids might exist unrecognized among the smaller fossil “possums” known from Oligo-Miocene sites in Australia. Unfortunately, the degenerate postcanine dentition of Tarsipes precludes relevant dental comparisons, and none of the currently known fossil “possum” familes are known from wellpreserved cranial material ( Woodburne and Clemens, 1986c; Archer et al., 1987; Woodburne et al., 1987a; Crosby and Archer, 2000; Crosby, 2002a; Crosby et al., 2004; Schwartz, 2006a; Archer et al., 2018).

Aplin, K. P., and M. Archer. 1987. Recent advances in marsupial systematics with a new syncretic classification. In M. Archer (editor), Possums and opossums: studies in evolution: xv - lxxii. Sydney: Surrey Beatty and Sons.

Archer, M. 1984 c. The Australian marsupial radiation. In M. Archer and G. Clayton (editors), Vertebrate zoogeography and evolution in Australasia: 633 - 808. Perth: Hesperian Press.

Archer, M., R. H. Tedford, and T. H. Rich. 1987. The Pilkipildridae, a new family and four new species of? petauroid possums (Marsupialia: Phalangerida) from the Australian Miocene. In M. Archer (editor), Possums and opossums: studies in evolution: 607 - 627. Sydney: Surrey Beatty and Sons.

Archer, M., and S. J. Hand. 2006. The Australian marsupial radiation. In J. R. Merrick, M. Archer, G. M. Hickey, and M. S. Y. Lee (editors), Evolution and biogeography of Australasian vertebrates: 575 - 646. Sydney: Auscipub Pty Ltd.

Balme, J. M., D. Merrilees, and J. K. Porter. 1978. Late Quaternary mammal remains, spanning about 30 000 years, from excavations in Devil's Lair, Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 61 (33 - 65).

Brammall, J. R., and M. Archer. 1999. Living and extinct petaurids, acrobatids, tarsipedids and burramyids (Marsupialia): relationships and diversity through time. Australian Mammalogy 21: 24 - 25.

Brewer, P., M. Archer, S. Hand, and G. Price. 2018. A new species of Miocene wombat (Marsupialia, Vombatiformes) from Riversleigh, Queensland, Australia, and implications for the evolutionary history of the Vombatidae. Palaeontologia Electronica: 21.2.27 A: 1 - 48.

Crosby, K., and M. Archer. 2000. Durudawirines, a new group of phalangeroid marsupials from the Miocene of Riversleigh, northwestern Queensland. Journal of Paleontology 74: 327 - 335.

Crosby, K. 2002 a. A second species of the possum Durudawiri (Marsupialia: Miralinidae) from the early Miocene of Riversleigh, northwestern Queensland. Alcheringa: an Australasian Journal of Palaeontology 26: 333 - 340.

Crosby, K., M. Bassarova, M. Archer, and K. Carbery. 2004. Fossil possums in Australasia: discovery, diversity and evolution. In R. L. Goldingray and S. M. Jackson (editors), The biology of Australian possums and gliders: 161 - 176. Chipping Norton, New South Wales, Australia: Surrey Beatty and Sons.

Long, J. A., M. Archer, T. F. Flannery, and S. J. Hand. 2002. Prehistoric mammals of Australia and New Guinea: one hundred million years of evolution, Sydney: UNSW Press.

Schwartz, L. R. S. 2006 a. Miralinidae (Marsupialia: Phalangeroidea) from northern Australia, including the youngest occurrence of the family. Alcheringa: an Australasian Journal of Palaeontology 30 (2): 343 - 350.

Woodburne, M. O., and W. A. Clemens. 1986 c. Revision of the Ektopodontidae (Mammalia; Marsupialia, Phalangeroidea) of the Australian Neogene (University of California Publications in Geological Sciences, vol. 131). Berkeley: University of California Press.

Woodburne, M. O., N. S. Pledge, and M. Archer. 1987 a. The Miralinidae, a new family and two new species of phalangeroid marsupials from Miocene strata of South Australia. In M. Archer (editor), Possums and opossums: studies in evolution: 581 - 602. Sydney: Surrey Beatty and Sons.