Craniodental Morphology And Phylogeny Of Marsupials
Author
Beck, Robin M. D.
School of Science, Engineering and Environment University of Salford, U. K. & School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales, Australia & Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Mammalogy) American Museum of Natural History
Author
Voss, Robert S.
Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Mammalogy) American Museum of Natural History
Author
Jansa, Sharon A.
Bell Museum and Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior University of Minnesota
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2022
2022-06-28
2022
457
1
353
https://bioone.org/journals/bulletin-of-the-american-museum-of-natural-history/volume-457/issue-1/0003-0090.457.1.1/Craniodental-Morphology-and-Phylogeny-of-Marsupials/10.1206/0003-0090.457.1.1.full
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090.457.1.1
0003-0090
6971356
†
Onirocuscus
SPECIES SCORED: †
Onirocuscus reidi
(
type
species).
GEOLOGICAL PROVENANCE OF SCORED
SPECIMENS
: Riversleigh Faunal Zone C, Riversleigh World Heritage Area,
Queensland
,
Australia
.
AGE OF SCORED SPECIMENS: Riversleigh Faunal Zone C is interpreted to be middle Miocene based on biostratigraphy (see above). In the absence of radiometric dates, we have assumed the entire span of the middle Miocene (Langhian to Serravallian; Cohen et al., 2013 [updated]) for this terminal.
ASSIGNED AGE
RANGE
:
15.970
–11.630
Mya.
REMARKS: †
Onirocuscus reidi
was originally described as a fossil species of
Strigocuscus
by Flannery and Archer (1987c), who highlighted similarities with the ground cuscus
Phalanger gymnotis
(formerly also classified in the genus
Strigocuscus
sensu Flannery et al., 1987
). However, based on evidence from a subsequently discovered and substantially complete cranium, Crosby (2007) referred
reidi
to a new genus, †
Onirocuscus
, which she placed in the phalangerid tribe
Trichosurini
. Crosby (2007) also described four other species of †
Onirocuscus
, but we did not use them for scoring purposes. Crosby’s (2007: fig. 7) phylogenetic hypothesis suggests that †
Onirocuscus
is closely related to “
Trichosurus
” †
dicksoni
, another fossil phalangerid from Riversleigh (see below). However, her phylogeny was not the result of analyzing a published data matrix and it endorsed some relationships—such as a basal position for
Ailurops
within
Phalangeridae
and
Strigocuscus celebensis
within
Trichosurini
(see also Crosby and Norris, 2003)—that are contradicted by recent molecular analyses (Ruedas and Morales, 2005; Raterman et al., 2006; Meredith et al., 2009b; Mitchell et al., 2014; Kealy et al., 2019).