Eutheria
Eutheria, meaning "true, well", and θηρίον, also called Pan-Placentalia, is the clade consisting of placental mammals and all therian mammals that are more closely related to placentals than to marsupials.
Eutherians are distinguished from non-eutherians by various phenotypic traits of the feet, ankles, jaws and teeth. All extant eutherians lack epipubic bones, which are present in all other living mammals. This allows for expansion of the abdomen during pregnancy, though epipubic bones are present in a number of primitive eutherians. Eutheria was named in 1872 by Theodore Gill; in 1880, Thomas Henry Huxley defined it to encompass a more broadly defined group than Placentalia.
The earliest unambiguous eutherians are known from the Early Cretaceous Yixian Formation of China, dating around 120 million years ago. Two tribosphenic mammals, Durlstodon and Durlstotherium from the Berriasian age of the Early Cretaceous in southern England have also been suggested to represent early eutherians. Another possible eutherian species Juramaia sinensis has been dated at from the early Late Jurassic of China. However some authors have considered Juramaia as a stem therian instead, and some sources have doubted the dating of the specimen.
Characteristics
Distinguishing features are:- an enlarged malleolus at the bottom of the tibia, the larger of the two shin bones
- the joint between the first metatarsal bone and the entocuneiform bone in the foot is offset farther back than the joint between the second metatarsal and middle cuneiform bones—in metatherians these joints are level with each other
- various features of jaws and teeth including: having three molars in the halves of each jaw, each upper canine having two roots, the paraconid on the last lower premolar is pronounced, the talonid region of the lower molars is narrower than the trigonid.
Taxonomy
- incertae sedis:
- * ?Family †Holoclemensiidae
- * ?Genus †Hyotheridium
- * ?Genus †Endotherium
- * Genus †Durlstodon
- * Genus †Durlstotherium
- * Genus †Microtherulum
- * Genus †Sinodelphys
- * Genus †Cokotherium
- * Genus †Ambolestes
- * Genus †Montanalestes
- * Genus †Indoclemensia
- * ?Family †Horolodectidae
- * ?Genus †Juramaia
- * Genus †Eomaia
- Genus †Acristatherium
- Clade †Tamirtheria ?
- * Genus †Prokennalestes
- * ?Genus †Hovurlestes
- * Genus †Murtoilestes
- * Genus †Bobolestes
- * Family †Adapisoriculidae
- * Genus †Paranyctoides
- * Family †Zhelestidae
- * Family †Cimolestidae
- * Order †Asioryctitheria
- * Family †Zalambdalestidae
- * Order †Leptictida
- *?Order †Taeniodonta
- * ?Family †Didymoconidae
- ?Genus †Purgatorius
- ?Genus †Protungulatum
- ?Genus †Oxyprimus
- Infraclass Placentalia sensu stricto
- Some older systems contained an order called Cimolesta, which contains the above taxa Cimolestidae, Taeniodonta and Didymoconidae, but also the taxa †Ptolemaiidae, †Palaeoryctidae, †Wyolestidae, †Pantolesta, †Tillodontia, †Apatotheria, †Pantodonta, Pholidota and †Palaeanodonta. Those additional taxa were thus also placed next to Cimolestidae, now classified as basal Eutheria. Creodonta and Dinocerata have also been suggested as basal eutherians.
- Some authors classify the taxa placed at the end of the above system as part of Placentalia sensu stricto. Depending on the author, this applies to taxa placed from Leptictida or Asioryctitheria or Adapisoriculidae down to Oxyprimus. Specifically, some older authors associated Cimolestidae with Ferae, Zalambdalestidae with Glires, Zhelestidae with Ungulata, and Leptictida and Adapisoriculidae with Lipotyphla or Archonta. All of these are now considered basal Eutheria.
Evolutionary history
The weakly favoured cladogram favours Boreoeutheria as a basal eutherian clade as sister to the Atlantogenata.
Phylogeny after Wang & Wang, 2023.
Below is a phylogeny from Gheerbrant & Teodori :