Phascolarctomorphia Aplin and Archer, 1987
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1206/0003-0090.457.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6974221 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EFDD5D-F6DF-68CF-D8B5-FCAD1B33FB1D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Phascolarctomorphia Aplin and Archer, 1987 |
status |
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Phascolarctomorphia Aplin and Archer, 1987
CONTENTS: † Litokoala , † Nimiokoala , and Phascolarctos (fig. 44).
STEM AGE: 32.4 Mya (95% HPD: 29.1–36.4 Mya).
CROWN AGE: 25.3 Mya (95% HPD: 19.6–30.3 Mya).
UNAMBIGUOUS CRANIODENTAL SYNAPOMORPHIES: Extracranial course of mandibular nerve traverses a bony canal in the roof of the hypotympanic sinus (char. 52: 1→2; ci = 0.231); postgenoid vein emerges from the postglenoid foramen in the posteromedial corner of the glenoid fossa, medial or anteromedial to the postglenoid process (char. 77: 0→1; ci = 0.250); and additional cuspid labial to m1 protoconid present, forming a cusplike protostylid (char. 165: 0→1; ci = 0.286).
COMMENTS: Phascolarctidae is consistently recovered in our molecular, morphological and total-evidence analyses ( figs. 27–33 View FIG View FIG View FIG View FIG View FIG View FIG ) as sister to the remaining vombatiforms, which collectively comprise Vombatomorphia (note that we consider † Thylacoleonidae to be Diprotodontia incertae sedis and not a member of Vombatiformes; see above). Aplin and Archer (1987) placed Phascolarctidae in its own infraorder, Phascolarctomorphia (coordinate to Vombatomorphia), and it remains the only known phascolarctomorphian family; thus, the craniodental synapomorphies of Phascolarctidae apply equally to Phascolarctomorphia.
Known phascolarctids are craniodentally distinctive ( Sonntag, 1922; Archer, 1984a, 1984c; Aplin, 1987, 1990; Lee and Carrick, 1989; Springer and Woodburne, 1989; Black and Archer, 1997b; Louys et al., 2009; Black et al., 2014a), and monophyly of this clade is supported by three unambiguous craniodental synapomorphies in our analysis, although all show some degree of homoplasy. Perhaps the most striking of these is the extracranial course of the mandibular nerve, which traverses a bony canal in the roof of the hypotympanic sinus in all three of our phascolarctid terminals († Litokoala , † Nimiokoala and Phascolarctos ; Aplin, 1987; 1990; Louys et al., 2009), a feature that (as far as we are aware) occurs in no other metatherians. 34
In contrast to Black et al. (2012a), we found † Nimiokoala , rather than † Litokoala , to be more closely related to Phascolarctos , with the † Nimiokoala + Phascolarctos clade supported by a single unambiguous synapomorphy (see file S 3 in the online supplement): maxillary and frontal bones in contact on medial orbital wall (char. 13 0→1; ci = 0.143). Like other vombatiform families, the oldest record of Phascolarctidae is from late Oligocene sites in Australia ( Archer et al., 1999; Long et al., 2002; Archer and Hand, 2006; Black et al., 2012b, 2014b).
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