Nullarbor dwarf bettong

The Nullarbor dwarf bettong, Bettongia pusilla, was a potoroine marsupial that occurred in Australia. The animal is only known from skeletons found in caves of the Nullarbor Plain and is now classified as recently extinct.

Nullarbor dwarf bettong
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Diprotodontia
Family: Potoroidae
Genus: Bettongia
Species:
B. pusilla
Binomial name
Bettongia pusilla
McNamara, 1997.[2]

Taxonomy

A species of Bettongia, a genus that includes still living species, allied to the subfamily Potoroinae. The description was first published in 1997 by R. A. McNamara, using specimens collected on the Nullarbor Plain from the Koonalda and Weekes Caves. The holotype is part of a juvenile's right jaw, with some teeth absent, obtained at the Koonalda site. The author recognised an earlier description, misidentified as Caloprymnus campestris by Ernest Lundelius and William D. Turnbull in 1984,[3] and the informal reference to an potoroid species. McNamara's paper on the new species details his diagnosis as arising independently, but gives credit for the discovery to earlier worker's identification of the taxon as 'Thomson's unnamed Potoroid' or 'Unnamed potoroid' (Baynes 1987).[2]

The epithet pusilla is derived from Latin, a reference to the small size of the animal. The English vernacular Nullarbor dwarf bettong was suggested by McNamara and is used to refer to this species.[4][2]

Description

Betongia pusilla show a form of dentition and jaw structure that distinguishes them from others of the genus. The mandible is lighter than the extant species, and the teeth are smaller. Molars of Bettongia pusilla are straight sided with an elevated crown, which contrasts with the bulbous shape of other Bettongia species.[4]

Distribution and habitat

Only known from a series of skeletal remains found in caves on the Nullarbor Plain, an arid desert region of southern Australia. The species is assumed to have become extinct in the states of Western and South Australia during the period of colonisation.[4]

gollark: I mean, some kind of reasoning-under-uncertainty capability sure, but there are more accurate formally/mathematically specified ways than humans' awfulness at this.
gollark: Why?
gollark: If it's just ineffable neural networks like we've got now, then ææææ all is bee.
gollark: And with better integration with dedicated computing modules.
gollark: If we actually understand things like that well enough to create them from scratch, we may be able to construct them *without* annoying human problems.

References

  1. Burbidge, A. (2008). "Bettongia pusilla". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2008.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  2. McNamara, J.A. (1997). "Some smaller macropod fossils of South Australia". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 117: 97–106.
  3. Lundelius, E.L.; Turnbull, W.D. (1984). "The mammalian fauna of Madura Cave, Western Australia. Macropodidae: Potoroinae /" (14). Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. Menkhorst, P.W.; Knight, F. (2011). A field guide to the mammals of Australia (3rd ed.). Melbourne: Oxford University Press. p. 146. ISBN 9780195573954.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.