Abstract
Considerable interchange of mammals between South America and Australasia
occurred during the first half of the Tertiary, including the presence of
placental mammals in Australia. This challenges the old assumption that the
marsupial radiation in Australia was made possible by the absence of placental
competition, and suggests that two properties of marsupial organization may
have favoured their survival in the increasingly arid climates that developed
after the separation of Australasia from Antarctica. The basal metabolic rates
of marsupials are about 70% of equivalent placentals, so their
maintenance requirements for energy, nitrogen and water are lower, whereas
their field metabolic rates are about the same, which means that they have a
greater metabolic scope to call on when active. This may have given marsupials
an advantage in semi-arid environments. The lengthy and complex lactation of
marsupials enables the female to exploit limited resources over an extended
period without compromising the survival of the young. Both these properties
of marsupials enabled them to survive the double constraints of low fertility
soils and the uncertain climate of Australia throughout the Tertiary. The
arrival of people was followed first by the extinction of the large marsupials
and, much later, by the wholesale decline or extinction of the small-to-medium
sized species. The common factor in both extinctions may have been the
constraints of marsupial reproduction.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
17 articles.
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