Ailuridae
This article has an unclear citation style. (December 2014) |
Ailuridae Temporal range:
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Red panda | |
Scientific classification | |
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Family: | Ailuridae Gray, 1843
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Genera | |
Amphictis (†) | |
Extant red panda distribution. |
Ailuridae is a family in the mammal order Carnivora. The family comprises the red panda (the sole living representative) and its extinct relatives.
Frédéric Georges Cuvier first described Ailurus as belonging to the raccoon family in 1825; this classification has been controversial ever since.[1] It was classified in the raccoon family because of morphological similarities of the head, colored ringed tail, and other morphological and ecological characteristics. Somewhat later, it was assigned to the bear family.
Molecular phylogenetic studies show that, as an ancient species in the order Carnivora, the red panda is relatively close to the American raccoon and may be either a monotypic family or a subfamily within the procyonid family.[1][2][3] An in-depth mitochondrial DNA population analysis study[4] stated: “According to the fossil record, the Red Panda diverged from its common ancestor with bears about 40 million years ago (Mayr 1986). With this divergence, by comparing the sequence difference between the red panda and the raccoon, the observed mutation rate for the red panda was calculated to be on the order of 109, which is apparently an underestimate compared with the average rate in mammals.[5] This underestimation is probably due to multiple recurrent mutations as the divergence between the red panda and the raccoon is extremely deep.”
The most recent molecular-systematic DNA research places the red panda into its own independent family, Ailuridae. Ailuridae are, in turn, part of a trichotomy within the broad superfamily Musteloidea (Flynn et al., 2001) that also includes the Procyonidae (raccoons) and a group that further subdivides into the Mephitidae (skunks) and Mustelidae (weasels); but it is not a bear (Ursidae).[6]
Red pandas have no close living relatives, and their nearest fossil ancestors, Parailurus, lived 3-4 million years ago. There may have been as many as three different species of Parailurus, all larger and more robust in the head and jaw, living in Europe and Asia but possibly crossing the Bering Strait into the Americas. The red panda may be the sole surviving species - a specialized offshoot surviving the Ice Age in a Chinese mountain refuge.[7]
Classification
In addition to Ailurus, the family Ailuridae includes eight extinct genera, most of which are assigned to three subfamilies, Amphicinae, Simocyoninae, and Ailurinae.[8][9][10][11][12]
- Ailuridae (Gray, 1843)
- †Amphicinae (Winge, 1895)
- †Amphictis (Pomel, 1853)
- †Amphictis borbonica (Viret, 1929)
- †Amphictis ambigua (Gervais, 1872)
- †Amphictis milloquensis (Helbing, 1928)
- †Amphictis antiqua (de Blainville, 1842)
- †Amphictis schlosseri (Heizmann and Morlo, 1994)
- †Amphictis prolongata (Morlo, 1996)
- †Amphictis wintershofensis (Roth, 1994)
- †Amphictis cuspida (Nagel, 2003)
- †Amphictis (Pomel, 1853)
- †Simocyoninae (Dawkins, 1868)
- †Alopecocyon (Camp & Vanderhoof, 1940)
- †Alopecocyon leardi (Stock, 1947)
- †Alopecocyon getti (Mein, 1958)
- †Alopecocyon goeriachensis (Toula, 1884)
- †Protursus (Crusafont & Kurtén, 1976)
- †Protursus simpsoni (Crusafont & Kurtén, 1976)
- †Simocyon (Wagner, 1858)
- †Simocyon primigenius (Roth & Wagner, 1854)
- †Simocyon diaphorus (Kaup, 1832)
- †Simocyon batalleri (Viret, 1929)
- †Simocyon hungaricus (Kadic & Kretzoi, 1927)
- †Simocyon sp. (Wang et al., 1998)
- †Alopecocyon (Camp & Vanderhoof, 1940)
- Ailurinae (Gray, 1843)
- †Magerictis (Ginsburg et. al, 1997)
- †Magerictis imperialis (Ginsburg et. al, 1997)
- †Pristinailurus (Wallace & Wang, 2004)
- †Pristinailurus bristoli (Wallace & Wang, 2004)
- †Parailurus (Schlosser, 1899)
- †Parailurus sp. (Morlo & Kundrát, 2001) - Včeláre Panda
- †Parailurus hungaricus (Kormos, 1935)
- †Parailurus anglicus (Dawkins, 1888)
- †Parailurus baikalicus (Sotnikova, 2008)
- †Parailurus sp. (Sasagawa et. al, 2003) - Japanese Panda
- †Parailurus sp. (Tedford & Gustafson, 1977) - American Panda
- Ailurus (F. Cuvier, 1825)
- Ailurus fulgens (F. Cuvier, 1825) - Red Panda
- †Magerictis (Ginsburg et. al, 1997)
- †Amphicinae (Winge, 1895)
References
- ^ a b Mayr, E (1986). "Uncertainty in Science: is the Giant panda a bear or a raccoon?". Nature. 323 (6091): 769–771. doi:10.1038/323769a0. PMID 3774006.
- ^ "Mitochondrial DNA sequence evolution in the Arctoidea". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 90 (20): 9557–9561. 1993. doi:10.1073/pnas.90.20.9557. PMC 47608. PMID 8415740.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Molecular Phylogeny of the Red Panda (Ailurus fulgens)". J. Hered. 86 (6): 413–422. 1995. PMID 8568209.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Genetic Diversity and Population History of the Red Panda (Ailurus fulgens) as Inferred from Mitochondrial DNA Sequence Variations". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 18 (6): 1070–1076. 2001. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a003878. PMID 11371595.
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ignored (help) - ^ Li, WH (1997). Molecular Evolution. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer.
- ^ "Whence the Red Panda" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-02-25.
- ^ "Ailurus fulgens". Mammalian Species. 222 (222). American Society of Mammalogists: 1–8. 1984. doi:10.2307/3503840. JSTOR 3503840.
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ignored (help) - ^ McKenna, MC & Bell SK (1997). Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level. Columbia University Press.
- ^ "Ailurid carnivoran mammal Simocyon from the late Miocene of Spain and the systematics of the genus". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 50: 219–238. 2005.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Evidence of a false thumb in a fossil carnivore clarifies the evolution of pandas". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 103 (2): 379–382. 2006. doi:10.1073/pnas.0504899102. PMC 1326154. PMID 16387860.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Two new carnivores from an unusual late Tertiary forest biota in eastern North America". Nature. 431 (7008): 556–559. 2004. doi:10.1038/nature02819. PMID 15457257.
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ignored (help) - ^ Morlo, M., and S. Peigné. "Molecular and morphological evidence for Ailuridae and a review of its genera." Carnivoran Evolution: New views on phylogeny, form, and function (2010): 92-140.
Further reading
- Davis, Davis D. (1964). “The Giant Panda: A Morphological Study of Evolutionary Mechanisms.“ Zoology Memoirs. Vol. 3:1-339.
- Decker D.M. and W.C. Wozencraft. (1991). “Phylogenetic Analysis of Recent Procyonid Genera.“ Journal of Mammalogy. Vol. 72 (1): 42-55.
- Flynn, J.J. and G.D. Wesley Hunt. (2005a). “Carnivora.“ in The Rise of Placental Mammals: Origin, Timing and Relationships of the Major Extant Clades, by D. Archibold and K. Rose. Baltimore. ISBN 0-8018-8022-X
- Flynn, John J., et al. (2005b). “Molecular phylogeny of the Carnivora (Mammalia): ASS-ASS the impact of increased sampling to on resolving enigmatic relationships.“ Systematic Biology. Vol. 54 (2):1-21. [1]
- Flynn, John J. Flynn, Michael A. Nedbal, J.W. Dragoo, and R.L. Honeycutt. (1998) "Whence the Red Panda?" Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. Vol. 17, No. 2, November 2000, pp. 190–199. [2]
- Glatston, A.R. (1989). Talk Panda Biology. The Hague. ISBN 90-5103-026-6
- Glatston, A.R. (compiler) (1994). “The Red Panda, Olingos, Coatis, Raccoons, and their Relatives: Status survey and conservation action plan for Procyonids and Ailurids.”
- IUCN/SSC Mustelid, Viverrid, and Procyonid Specialist Group. IUCN/SSC, Gland, Switzerland.
- Gregory, W.K. (1936). “On the Phylogenetic Relationships of the Giant Panda (Ailuropoda) to other Arctoid Carnivores.“ American Museum Novitates. Vol. 878:1-29.
- Hu, J.C. (1990). “Proceedings of studies of the red panda.” Chinese Scientific Publishing, Beijing, China [in Chinese].
- Wilson, Don E. and DeeAnn M. Reeder. (2005). Mammal of Species of the World. Johns Hopkins University press. ISBN 0-8018-8221-4.