Catalog Number:
67899
Specimen Count:
1
Cabinet:
20
Drawer/Shelf:
03
Upper Level Taxonomy:
Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Tetrapoda, Mammalia, Eutheria, Artiodactyla, Bovidae, Alcelaphinae

It might seem odd to group Cetaceans (whales) with Artiodactyls (hooved animals such as pigs, deer, camels, llamas, and hippos). But that is exactly what the combination of their scientific names into Cetartiodactyla is about. For some time, scientists had proposed that whales descended from land mammals, with the focus on the hooved fossil Mesonychia. In the 1990s, DNA sequences from many different genes revealed a closer relationship between whales and hippos than between hippos and any other hooved mammals. While it is not yet known what common ancestor whales and hippos share, the newly discovered relationship is getting attention. It appears that whales and hippos may have branched off from Artiodactyls as long as 60 million years ago. Scientists have proposed a new group called Whippomorpha (wh[ale] + hippo[potamus]; morphe = form) to include whales and hippopotamus and exclude other hooved animals.

Mammals have a unique arrangement of a lower jaw directly hinged to the skull. The upper jaw is fixed, while the lower jaw is movable. A powerful bite results which, coupled with specialized teeth, allows mammals to eat a diversity of foods. Straight-edged incisor teeth at the front of the jaw are for cutting and gnawing. Pointed, canine teeth on the sides can grab and tear meat. Flat, broad molars are used to grind or crush plants or shelled animals. Mammals tend to have more than one type of tooth (heterodont dentition), with the mix depending on diet. Meat-eaters have sharp incisors and canines plus slicing molars; mammals who eat tough plants have duller incisors and canines, but large, ridged molars. All types of mammal teeth are replaced once or never during a mammal's lifetime. A coating of enamel, the hardest material found in a mammal's body, makes teeth built to last.