Abstract
A full account is presented of the anatomy of the skeletal musculature of the
marsupial Trichosurus vulpecula, its innervation is noted, and an outline of the brachial
and lumbo-sacral plexuses is given, the findings reported being the results of a study
involving five separate animals.
All discrepancies between the findings of this investigation and those previously
reported for the species are noted, a comparison is made with the muscles described
for other marsupials, and the relatively few unusual features shown by this species
are pointed out. From this comparison it is concluded that the musculature shows a
fairly generalized pattern and bears a closer resemblance, both in its overall structure
and in the few uncommon features that it presents, to the cuscuses than to any other
marsupials that have been adequately described. The cuscuses, which have been
described in the literature quoted in this paper under the generic names Phalangista,
Cuscus, and Phalanger are the only other members of the Phalangerinae for which
adequate accounts of the muscular system are available.
This work, apart from providing the most comprehensive description yet given
of the musculature of any single marsupial species, furnishes additional evidence for
the view that the vulpine phalanger is a typical phalangerine of a basic generalized
marsupial structure such as probably characterized the original phalangeroid stock.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
30 articles.
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