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Bandicoot

Bandicoots are a group of more than 20 species of small to medium-sized, terrestrial, largely nocturnal marsupial omnivores in the order Peramelemorphia.[1] They are endemic to the AustraliaNew Guinea region, including the Bismarck Archipelago to the east and Seram and Halmahera to the west.

Bandicoots
Temporal range: Late Oligocene - Recent Late Oligocene–Recent
Eastern barred bandicoot (Perameles gunni)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Clade: Agreodontia
Order: Peramelemorphia
Superfamilies, etc.

See text.

Etymology edit

The bandicoot is a member of the order Peramelemorphia, and the word "bandicoot" is often used informally to refer to any peramelemorph, such as the bilby.[2] The term originally referred to the unrelated Indian bandicoot rat from the Telugu word pandikokku (పందికొక్కు) wherein pandi means pig and kokku means rat.[3]

Characteristics edit

Bandicoots have V-shaped faces, ending with their prominent noses similar to proboscis. These noses make them, along with bilbies, similar in appearance to elephant shrews and extinct leptictids, and they are distantly related to both mammal groups. With their well-attuned snouts and sharp claws, bandicoot are fossorial diggers. They have small but fine teeth that allow them to easily chew their food.[4]

Like most marsupials, male bandicoots have bifurcated penises.[5]

The embryos of bandicoots have a chorioallantoic placenta that connects them to the uterine wall, in addition to the choriovitelline placenta that is common to all marsupials.[6] However, the chorioallantoic placenta is small compared to those of the Placentalia, and lacks chorionic villi.

Bandicoots can reach 11 to 31 in (28 to 79 cm) in length, and 0.4 to 3.5 lb (0.18 to 1.6 kg) in weight. A bandicoot has a long, pointed snout, large ears, a short body, and a long tail. Its body is covered with fur that can be brown, black, golden, white, or grey in colour. Bandicoots have strong hind legs well adapted for jumping.

Bandicoots also have low body temperatures and low basal metabolic rates which aides their survival in hot and dry climates. They also have low total water evaporative rate and effective panting mechanisms which further aide their survival in hotter temperatures. [7]

Classification edit

Classification within the Peramelemorphia was previously thought to be straightforward, with two families in the order—the short-legged and mostly herbivorous bandicoots, and the longer-legged, nearly carnivorous bilbies. In recent years, however, the situation clearly has become more complex. First, the bandicoots of the New Guinean and far-northern Australian rainforests were deemed distinct from all other bandicoots and were grouped together in the separate family Peroryctidae. More recently, the bandicoot families were reunited in the Peramelidae, with the New Guinean species split into four genera in two subfamilies, Peroryctinae and Echymiperinae, while the "true bandicoots" occupy the subfamily Peramelinae. The only exception is the now-extinct pig-footed bandicoot, which has been given its own family, Chaeropodidae.

Vernacular names edit

 
Bandicoots in bronze at the Waratah Mills light rail stop on Sydney's Inner West Light Rail line; public art by Ochre Lawson[16]

The name bandicoot is an Anglicised version of a word from the Telugu language of South India which translates as 'pig-rat'. What are now called bandicoots are not found in India and bandicoot was originally applied to completely unrelated mammals—several species of large rats (rodents). Today, these species, belonging to the genera Bandicota and Nesokia, are referred to as bandicoot rats.

Blust[17][18][19][20] reconstructs the form *mansar or *mansər 'bandicoot' for Proto-Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian (i.e., the reconstructed most recent common ancestor of the Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian languages) from related words like Oceanic Motu mada and Fijian gwaca,[21] but the validity of this reconstruction is doubted by Schapper (2011).[22] It is known as aine in the Abinomn language of Papua, Indonesia.[23]

Bandicoots have different names by the indigenous peoples of the Australia-New Guinea region. For example, the Kaurna people refer to the southern brown bandicoot as the bung or the marti.[24][25]

References edit

  1. ^ Bandicoot. Encyclopaedia Britannica. 7 October 2020. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
  2. ^ "Definition of bandicoot from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary". Retrieved 7 September 2011.
  3. ^ Satpathy, Sumanyu (30 September 2017). "A tea party with Topiwalla and Alice". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  4. ^ "Bandicoots". Department of Environment and Science, Queensland. 17 September 2009. from the original on 8 March 2020. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  5. ^ "Natural History Collections: Anatomical Differences". Nhc.ed.ac.uk. Retrieved 7 March 2014.
  6. ^ Feldhamer, George A. (2007). Mammalogy: adaptation, diversity, ecology. JHU Press. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-8018-8695-9.
  7. ^ "Metabolic and ventilatory physiology of the Barrow Island golden bandicoot (Isoodon auratus barrowensis) and the northern brown bandicoot (Isoodon macrourus)". Journal of Thermal Biology. 33 (6): 337–344. August 2008.
  8. ^ Strahan, R. (1995). Mammals of Australia. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.
  9. ^ Travouillon, K. J.; Gurovich, Y.; Beck, R. M. D.; Muirhead, J. (2010). "An exceptionally well-preserved short-snouted bandicoot (Marsupialia; Peramelemorphia) from Riversleigh's Oligo-Miocene deposits, northwestern Queensland, Australia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30 (5): 1528. Bibcode:2010JVPal..30.1528T. doi:10.1080/02724634.2010.501463. S2CID 86726840.
  10. ^ Travouillon, K. J.; Gurovich, Y.; Archer, M.; Hand, S. J.; Muirhead, J. (2013). "The genus Galadi: Three new bandicoots (Marsupialia, Peramelemorphia) from Riversleigh's Miocene deposits, northwestern Queensland, Australia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 33 (1): 153–168. Bibcode:2013JVPal..33..153T. doi:10.1080/02724634.2012.713416. hdl:11336/5382. S2CID 53525712.
  11. ^ Gurovich, Yamila; Travouillon, Kenny J.; Beck, Robin M. D.; Muirhead, Jeanette; Archer, Michael (2013). "Biogeographical implications of a new mouse-sized fossil bandicoot (Marsupialia: Peramelemorphia) occupying a dasyurid-like ecological niche across Australia". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 12 (3): 265. doi:10.1080/14772019.2013.776646. hdl:11336/5406. S2CID 140187280.
  12. ^ Travouillon, K.J., Beck, R.M.D., Hand, S.J., Archer, M. (2013). "The oldest fossil record of bandicoots (Marsupialia; Peramelemorphia) from the late Oligocene of Australia". Palaeontologia Electronica. 16 (2): 13A.1–13A.52.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Travouillon, Kenny J.; Archer, Michael; Hand, Suzanne J.; Muirhead, Jeanette (2014). "Sexually Dimorphic Bandicoots (Marsupialia: Peramelemorphia) from the Oligo-Miocene of Australia, First Cranial Ontogeny for Fossil Bandicoots and New Species Descriptions". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. 22 (2): 141. doi:10.1007/s10914-014-9271-8. S2CID 14643777.
  14. ^ Stirton, R.A. (1955). "Late tertiary marsupials from South Australia". Records of the South Australian Museum 11, 247–268.
  15. ^ Travouillon, K. J.; Hand, S. J.; Archer, M.; Black, K. H. (2014). "Earliest modern bandicoot and bilby (Marsupialia, Peramelidae and Thylacomyidae) from the Miocene of the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, northwestern Queensland, Australia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 34 (2): 375. Bibcode:2014JVPal..34..375T. doi:10.1080/02724634.2013.799071. S2CID 85622058.
  16. ^ Lawson, Ochre. "Warratah [sic] Mills Light Rail Station - Davis St entrance". ochrelawsonart.com. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  17. ^ Blust, Robert. 1982. The linguistic value of the Wallace Line. Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 138:231–50.
  18. ^ Blust, Robert. 1993. Central and Central-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian. Oceanic Linguistics 32:241–93.
  19. ^ Blust, Robert. 2002. The history of faunal terms in Austronesian languages. Oceanic Linguistics 41:89–139.
  20. ^ Blust, Robert. 2009. The position of the languages of eastern Indonesia: A Reply to Donohue and Grimes. Oceanic Linguistics 48:36–77.
  21. ^ Blust, Robert; Trussel, Stephen (2010). "*mansar: bandicoot, marsupial rat". Austronesian Comparative Dictionary. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  22. ^ Schapper, Antoinette (2011). "Phalanger Facts: Notes on Blust's Marsupial Reconstructions". Oceanic Linguistics. 50 (1): 258–272. doi:10.1353/ol.2011.0004. S2CID 145482148.
  23. ^ Foley, William A. (2018). "The languages of Northwest New Guinea". In Palmer, Bill (ed.). The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide. The World of Linguistics. Vol. 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 433–568. ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
  24. ^ "Five facts about bandicoots". landscape.sa.gov.au. 28 July 2016. from the original on 20 August 2021. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  25. ^ "CLICS³ - Concept BANDICOOT". clics.clld.org. Retrieved 2 March 2021.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of bandicoot at Wiktionary

bandicoot, group, more, than, species, small, medium, sized, terrestrial, largely, nocturnal, marsupial, omnivores, order, peramelemorphia, they, endemic, australia, guinea, region, including, bismarck, archipelago, east, seram, halmahera, west, stemporal, ran. Bandicoots are a group of more than 20 species of small to medium sized terrestrial largely nocturnal marsupial omnivores in the order Peramelemorphia 1 They are endemic to the Australia New Guinea region including the Bismarck Archipelago to the east and Seram and Halmahera to the west BandicootsTemporal range Late Oligocene Recent Late Oligocene Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NEastern barred bandicoot Perameles gunni Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaInfraclass MarsupialiaClade AgreodontiaOrder PeramelemorphiaSuperfamilies etc See text Contents 1 Etymology 2 Characteristics 3 Classification 4 Vernacular names 5 References 6 External linksEtymology editThe bandicoot is a member of the order Peramelemorphia and the word bandicoot is often used informally to refer to any peramelemorph such as the bilby 2 The term originally referred to the unrelated Indian bandicoot rat from the Telugu word pandikokku ప ద క క క wherein pandi means pig and kokku means rat 3 Characteristics editBandicoots have V shaped faces ending with their prominent noses similar to proboscis These noses make them along with bilbies similar in appearance to elephant shrews and extinct leptictids and they are distantly related to both mammal groups With their well attuned snouts and sharp claws bandicoot are fossorial diggers They have small but fine teeth that allow them to easily chew their food 4 Like most marsupials male bandicoots have bifurcated penises 5 The embryos of bandicoots have a chorioallantoic placenta that connects them to the uterine wall in addition to the choriovitelline placenta that is common to all marsupials 6 However the chorioallantoic placenta is small compared to those of the Placentalia and lacks chorionic villi Bandicoots can reach 11 to 31 in 28 to 79 cm in length and 0 4 to 3 5 lb 0 18 to 1 6 kg in weight A bandicoot has a long pointed snout large ears a short body and a long tail Its body is covered with fur that can be brown black golden white or grey in colour Bandicoots have strong hind legs well adapted for jumping Bandicoots also have low body temperatures and low basal metabolic rates which aides their survival in hot and dry climates They also have low total water evaporative rate and effective panting mechanisms which further aide their survival in hotter temperatures 7 Classification editClassification within the Peramelemorphia was previously thought to be straightforward with two families in the order the short legged and mostly herbivorous bandicoots and the longer legged nearly carnivorous bilbies In recent years however the situation clearly has become more complex First the bandicoots of the New Guinean and far northern Australian rainforests were deemed distinct from all other bandicoots and were grouped together in the separate family Peroryctidae More recently the bandicoot families were reunited in the Peramelidae with the New Guinean species split into four genera in two subfamilies Peroryctinae and Echymiperinae while the true bandicoots occupy the subfamily Peramelinae The only exception is the now extinct pig footed bandicoot which has been given its own family Chaeropodidae Order Peramelemorphia Superfamily Perameloidea 8 Unclassified family Genus Galadi 4 species 9 10 Genus Bulungu 3 species 11 12 Genus Madju 2 species 13 Family Thylacomyidae Genus Macrotis 2 species Genus Ischnodon 1 species 14 Genus Liyamayi 1 extinct species 15 Family Chaeropodidae Pig footed bandicoot Genus Chaeropus 1 species Family Peramelidae Subfamily Peramelinae Genus Isoodon short nosed bandicoots 3 species Genus Perameles long nosed bandicoots 3 extant species Subfamily Peroryctinae Genus Peroryctes New Guinean long nosed bandicoots 2 species Subfamily Echymiperinae Genus Echymipera New Guinean spiny bandicoots 5 species Genus Microperoryctes New Guinean mouse bandicoots 5 species Genus Rhynchomeles Seram bandicoot 1 species Superfamily Yaraloidea Family Yaralidae Genus Yarala 2 speciesVernacular names edit nbsp Bandicoots in bronze at the Waratah Mills light rail stop on Sydney s Inner West Light Rail line public art by Ochre Lawson 16 The name bandicoot is an Anglicised version of a word from the Telugu language of South India which translates as pig rat What are now called bandicoots are not found in India and bandicoot was originally applied to completely unrelated mammals several species of large rats rodents Today these species belonging to the genera Bandicota and Nesokia are referred to as bandicoot rats Blust 17 18 19 20 reconstructs the form mansar or manser bandicoot for Proto Central Eastern Malayo Polynesian i e the reconstructed most recent common ancestor of the Central Eastern Malayo Polynesian languages from related words like Oceanic Motu mada and Fijian gwaca 21 but the validity of this reconstruction is doubted by Schapper 2011 22 It is known as aine in the Abinomn language of Papua Indonesia 23 Bandicoots have different names by the indigenous peoples of the Australia New Guinea region For example the Kaurna people refer to the southern brown bandicoot as the bung or the marti 24 25 References edit Bandicoot Encyclopaedia Britannica 7 October 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2021 Definition of bandicoot from the Merriam Webster Online Dictionary Retrieved 7 September 2011 Satpathy Sumanyu 30 September 2017 A tea party with Topiwalla and Alice The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 19 June 2019 Bandicoots Department of Environment and Science Queensland 17 September 2009 Archived from the original on 8 March 2020 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Natural History Collections Anatomical Differences Nhc ed ac uk Retrieved 7 March 2014 Feldhamer George A 2007 Mammalogy adaptation diversity ecology JHU Press p 232 ISBN 978 0 8018 8695 9 Metabolic and ventilatory physiology of the Barrow Island golden bandicoot Isoodon auratus barrowensis and the northern brown bandicoot Isoodon macrourus Journal of Thermal Biology 33 6 337 344 August 2008 Strahan R 1995 Mammals of Australia Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press Travouillon K J Gurovich Y Beck R M D Muirhead J 2010 An exceptionally well preserved short snouted bandicoot Marsupialia Peramelemorphia from Riversleigh s Oligo Miocene deposits northwestern Queensland Australia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30 5 1528 Bibcode 2010JVPal 30 1528T doi 10 1080 02724634 2010 501463 S2CID 86726840 Travouillon K J Gurovich Y Archer M Hand S J Muirhead J 2013 The genus Galadi Three new bandicoots Marsupialia Peramelemorphia from Riversleigh s Miocene deposits northwestern Queensland Australia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 33 1 153 168 Bibcode 2013JVPal 33 153T doi 10 1080 02724634 2012 713416 hdl 11336 5382 S2CID 53525712 Gurovich Yamila Travouillon Kenny J Beck Robin M D Muirhead Jeanette Archer Michael 2013 Biogeographical implications of a new mouse sized fossil bandicoot Marsupialia Peramelemorphia occupying a dasyurid like ecological niche across Australia Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 12 3 265 doi 10 1080 14772019 2013 776646 hdl 11336 5406 S2CID 140187280 Travouillon K J Beck R M D Hand S J Archer M 2013 The oldest fossil record of bandicoots Marsupialia Peramelemorphia from the late Oligocene of Australia Palaeontologia Electronica 16 2 13A 1 13A 52 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Travouillon Kenny J Archer Michael Hand Suzanne J Muirhead Jeanette 2014 Sexually Dimorphic Bandicoots Marsupialia Peramelemorphia from the Oligo Miocene of Australia First Cranial Ontogeny for Fossil Bandicoots and New Species Descriptions Journal of Mammalian Evolution 22 2 141 doi 10 1007 s10914 014 9271 8 S2CID 14643777 Stirton R A 1955 Late tertiary marsupials from South Australia Records of the South Australian Museum 11 247 268 Travouillon K J Hand S J Archer M Black K H 2014 Earliest modern bandicoot and bilby Marsupialia Peramelidae and Thylacomyidae from the Miocene of the Riversleigh World Heritage Area northwestern Queensland Australia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 34 2 375 Bibcode 2014JVPal 34 375T doi 10 1080 02724634 2013 799071 S2CID 85622058 Lawson Ochre Warratah sic Mills Light Rail Station Davis St entrance ochrelawsonart com Retrieved 28 May 2023 Blust Robert 1982 The linguistic value of the Wallace Line Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde 138 231 50 Blust Robert 1993 Central and Central Eastern Malayo Polynesian Oceanic Linguistics 32 241 93 Blust Robert 2002 The history of faunal terms in Austronesian languages Oceanic Linguistics 41 89 139 Blust Robert 2009 The position of the languages of eastern Indonesia A Reply to Donohue and Grimes Oceanic Linguistics 48 36 77 Blust Robert Trussel Stephen 2010 mansar bandicoot marsupial rat Austronesian Comparative Dictionary Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Retrieved 8 November 2022 Schapper Antoinette 2011 Phalanger Facts Notes on Blust s Marsupial Reconstructions Oceanic Linguistics 50 1 258 272 doi 10 1353 ol 2011 0004 S2CID 145482148 Foley William A 2018 The languages of Northwest New Guinea In Palmer Bill ed The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area A Comprehensive Guide The World of Linguistics Vol 4 Berlin De Gruyter Mouton pp 433 568 ISBN 978 3 11 028642 7 Five facts about bandicoots landscape sa gov au 28 July 2016 Archived from the original on 20 August 2021 Retrieved 2 March 2021 CLICS Concept BANDICOOT clics clld org Retrieved 2 March 2021 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of bandicoot at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bandicoot amp oldid 1187872220, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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