List of soricomorphs

This list contains the species in the order Soricomorpha. Soricomorpha is no longer considered a valid taxon; it is now knoiwn to be paraphyletic, since erinaceids are the sister group of shrews.[1][2][3]

Hispaniolan solenodon (Solenodon paradoxus)

Family Solenodontidae (solenodons)

Family Soricidae (shrews)

Subfamily Crocidurinae (white-toothed shrews)

Subfamily Myosoricinae

Subfamily Soricinae

Tribe Anourosoricini

Tribe Blarinellini

Tribe Blarinini

Tribe Nectogalini

Tribe Notiosoricini

Tribe Soricini

Family Talpidae (moles and desmans)

Subfamily Scalopinae

Tribe Condylurini

Tribe Scalopini

Subfamily Talpinae

Tribe Desmanini

Tribe Neurotrichini

Tribe Scaptonychini

Tribe Talpini

Tribe Urotrichini

Subfamily Uropsilinae

gollark: School but instead of reading random poems you memorise 'life skills' would be quite ae ae ae, as they say.
gollark: If I were to redesign school, it would be much less regimented (you would not be grouped by year etc.), more flexible (an actually sane schedule and more/earlier choice of subjects), and focus on more general skills (not overly specific reading of books, or learning procedures for specific maths things, or that sort of thing). Additionally, more project-based work and more group stuff.
gollark: Those are specific uses of some of those things, yes. Which is why those are important. Although programming isn't intensely mathy and interest is trivial.
gollark: I assume you mean interpersonal? School is really bad for that as it stands because you're artificially segmented into people of ~exactly the same age in a really weird environment.
gollark: *Ideally*, at least, school works as a place to learn things from those who know them well and discuss it with interested peers.

See also

References

  1. Douady, C. J.; Chatelier, P. I.; Madsen, O.; de Jong, W. W.; Catzeflis, F.; Springer, M. S.; Stanhope, M. J. (October 2002). "Molecular phylogenetic evidence confirming the Eulipotyphla concept and in support of hedgehogs as the sister group to shrews". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 25 (1): 200–209. doi:10.1016/S1055-7903(02)00232-4.
  2. Roca, A. L.; Bar-Gal, G. K.; Eizirik, E.; Helgen, K. M.; Maria, R.; Springer, M. S.; O'Brien, S. J.; Murphy, W. J. (2004-06-10). "Mesozoic origin for West Indian insectivores". Nature. 429 (6992): 649–651. Bibcode:2004Natur.429..649R. doi:10.1038/nature02597. PMID 15190349.
  3. Bininda-Emonds, O. R. P.; Cardillo, M.; Jones, K. E.; MacPhee, R. D. E.; Beck, R. M. D.; Grenyer, R.; Price, S. A.; Vos, R. A.; Gittleman, J. L.; Purvis, A. (2007-03-29). "The delayed rise of present-day mammals". Nature. 446 (7135): 507–512. Bibcode:2007Natur.446..507B. doi:10.1038/nature05634. PMID 17392779.
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