Ornithorhynchoidea

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Ornithorhynchoids
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian)–present
File:Johnson's household book of nature (Plate LXIV) (7268710608).jpg
Two extant ornithorhynchoids:
the short-beaked echidna (above) and platypus (below)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Synapsida
Clade: Mammaliaformes
Class: Mammalia
Order: Monotremata
Superfamily: Ornithorhynchoidea
Flannery et al., 2024
Families
File:Ornithorhynchoids map.jpg
Range of extant ornithorhynchoids

Ornithorhynchoidea is a superfamily of egg-laying mammals containing the only living monotremes, the platypus and the echidnas, as well as their closest fossil relatives, to the exclusion of more primitive fossil monotremes of uncertain affinity.[1]

The clade was defined in 2024 following the discovery of some fossil monotremes from the Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian)-aged Griman Creek Formation of Lightning Ridge Australia, which appeared to be more closely related to extant monotremes than to co-occurring early monotremes such as Steropodon and Kollikodon.[1][2]

Taxonomy

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Opalios, the only described member of the extinct family Opalionidae, is considered the most basal ornithorhynchoid due to its unique combination of ancestral and derived traits.[1]

The presence of the probable stem-ornithorhynchids Dharragarra and Patagorhynchus in the Late Cretaceous implies that the divergence between the platypus and echidnas may have occurred during this time.[1] However, genetic estimates tend to prefer a Cenozoic divergence between these two extant groups.[3][4]

Although most members of this group—extinct and extant—are known from Australia, at least two ornithorhynchid-like forms reached southern South America during the Maastrichtian (Patagorhynchus) and early Paleocene (Monotrematum).[5][6]

The following genera are known:

They can be distinguished from other fossil monotremes by their twisted-shaped dentaries, with the lingual surfaces being dorsoventrally flattened (aside from in echidnas).[1]

References

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