Title: Xenarthra anteaters, sloths,
1Xenarthra anteaters, sloths,
armadillosPholidotapangolins
- Xenarthra is from the Greek, meaning
strange-jointed ones. With minor exceptions
Xenarthrans are and have always been South
American animals. - Pholidota means scaled-skin animals. Pangolins
are scaly ant- and termite-eaters of Africa and
Southeast Asia.
2The Living Xenarthra
55MYA
65MYA
3Probable patterns of xenarthran evolution
- Earliest types
- Ancestral form was probably a sloth-like,
leaf-eating, cellulose fermenter.
4Characteristics of living xenarthrans
- Backbone is highly flexible, but in 1 dimension
only. - Teeth (if present) lack enamel and are simple
single-rooted. - Smell is emphasized over other senses.
- All exploit difficult food resources
(armadillos less so than sloths and anteaters). - All survivors (except armadillos) are extreme
specialists. - All try to save thermoregulatory energy
- By low body temps and/or heterothermy.
- By behavior.
- By choice of habitat and/or microhabitat.
5Some Representative Living Xenarthrans
6Sloths in general
- Taxonomic diversity
- once much greater 60 fossil genera are known
- 2-toed 3-toed varieties
- Ecological similarity among living sloths.
- The problems of a leaf-diet
- Tropical ecology detoxifying leaves
- Digesting cellulose energetics ?
7Giant ground sloths (extinct)
- Ground sloths are placed in the Family
Megalonychidae. The ancestor of the extant
sloths.
Think 200kg-3000kg!
8Adaptations (?) that are probably related to
sloth energetics
- Fermentation in compartmented stomach
- Cost of microbial symbiants
- Month-long throughput
- Feces and urine
- About 1-2 times per week (500ml urine!)
- Climb down from the tree why?
- Slow movement
- Low body temperature
- 28oC-35oC (system-failure possible at 18o
ambient) - Range-restriction to tropical rainforest
- Adaptations to save energy
- Move slowly (hence the name)
- Insulate well have low body temperatures (must
therefore live in tropics)
9Three-toed sloth(Bradypodidae)
- Bradypus variegatus.
- 40-70cm 2.2-6.2kg.
- Much slower than 2-toed sloth.
- Eats from one tree for very long time.
- Green fur (longitudinal slits and specific
algae). - 11 month gestation extensive maternal care.
102-toed sloth(count on front feet)
- Choloepus hoffmanni
- More active, fiercer, and more catholic of diet
than 3-toed variety. - 50-55cm, 5-8.5kg.
- Highly variable body temps (24oC-35oC).
- Female-biased sex ratio (reportedly 11 to 1) in
wild. (Why?) - Animal is long-lived (often gt 20 years).
11Sloth status and conservation
- They usually dominate Amazonian-mammal biomass
- 2-toed 2.7/a
- 3-toed 7/a
- The prefer Cecropia over other trees
- This genus thrives in second-growth forest.
- So habitat is not endangered.
12Anteaters (3 basic types)
- In the Neotropics, much of the zoomass is
concentrated in colonial insects anteaters eat
nothing else. - Front legs are powerful each has a single,
greatly enlarged claw (3rd digit). Guess why. - Teeth are absent, but rostra are elongated
ridged. Tongues are long sticky. - Pyloric region of stomach is thickened and may
serve as a gizzard for grinding chitinous
exoskeletons (and as a protection against
concentrated formic acid).
13Type 1 small entirely arboreal
- Cyclopes didactylus
- 350g, lt50cm head-body.
- Entirely nocturnal.
- One author estimated 700-5000 ants/day (former is
much too low). - Only xenarthran for which paternal care reported
(but is it true?). - Male-overlap territorial pattern.
14Type 2 Medium sized partly arboreal partly
terrestrial
- The genus Tamandua (gt 2 species) enters North
America in southern Mexico. - 2-7kg, 60cm head-body.
- Eats ants termites (about 9000/day).
- Tripod defense.
- 1 baby (rarely twins), extensive maternal care
for up to about 1 year. - Most common anteater.
15Type 3 Large entirely terrestrial
- Myrmecophaga tridactyla.
- 20-40kg, 180cm total length.
- Female bears one young per year, nurses for 6mo.,
carries on back for about one year. - Often diurnal where not molested by people.
- Male-overlap territory.
- Most endangered by conversion of habitat for
cattle ranching.
16Ecologyof M. tridactylaHow do they manage???
- Adults need 14,000-28,000 insects/day
- Termites seldom eaten?
- Termites dominate diet?
- Taking so many from a single colony would destroy
resource piecemeal. - Native to
17Armadillos the most successful living xenarthrans
- Roughly 30 living species, mostly South American
(one species ? USA). - Armor (bone horn-like substance) is arranged in
bands plates connected by flexible skin.
(Shoulder hip shields, armored head legs,
rings around body, underside soft.) - Food is mostly invertebrates though small
vertebrates considerable plant matter are also
consumed. - Respiration often anaerobic low metabolic rate.
18Dasypus novemcinctussuccessful invader of USA
from the South
- Total length about 75cm mass c. 5kg (XX) 6.5kg
(XY). - Range is probably constrained bywell, who knows?
(Dramatic range extensions in twentieth
century.) - In USA, gt 90 of diet is invertebrates.
- .
19How did they get there? How far can they go?
- US range extensions
- Natural movements plus
- Introductions
- Hitch-hiking
- Limits ( non-limits) to range
- Physiological constraints perhaps not primary
- Vasoconstriction, shivering, increased
metabolism - (Look at Mo, Ok, Tx, Ks.)
- Food-supply may be more critical
- Global Warming the Armadillos that ate
Manhattan?
20Priodontes maximus
- 100cm h-b, 70kg (? still, largest living
xenarthran). - Once widespread across South American plains.
- Digs shelters, often in active termite mounds.
- Main food is termites ( a few ants feeding
strategy not like giant anteater). - Highly endangered by habitat modification and
direct exploitation.
21Cabassosus tatouay
- 20-45cm h-b, 5kg.
- Main food is insects (mostly ants termites?)
sticky tongue. - Middle claw greatly enlarged (root-cutting).
- Usually produces 1 baby/litter.
- Endangered by habitat destruction.
22Tolypeutes matacus
- 30cm h-b, 1.5-1.8kg.
- Probably eats mostly ants termites.
- Bears single young.
- Only armadillo genus that can roll into a
complete ball.
23Chaetophractus Fairy armadillos
- This variable genus includes at least 3 species
of small (c. 25cm) armadillos. - Thermoregulatory strategy includes burrows
several meters long. - Chaetophractus includes much plant material in
diet. It is known for burrowing under carcasses
to obtain maggots.
24Euphractus sexcinctus
- 40cm h-b, 3-7kg.
- South American dry seasonally inundated
prairies. - Spends most of day in burrow.
25Zaedyus the pichi
- Head-body length is 25-35cm.
- Insect food is typical of armadillos though
pichis are said to include a fair amount of plant
material in diet. - These armadillos inhabit sandy soils in southern
South America. - Litter is 1-3 young weaning occurs at about 6
months.
26Family Glyptodontidae (extinct)
- Glyptodonts were distant relatives of armadillos.
- More completely armored.
- Larger grazers.
- Once, successful invaders of the North (including
South Carolina). - Possible causes of extinction
- Competition?
- Climate?
- People?
27Order Pholidota (pangolins)
- Taxonomic position unclear
- No teeth. Long, sticky tongues. Bodies covered
with scales derived from agglutinated hairs. - Pangolins can be highly selective in diet, often
moving great distances (at night) and scraping in
soil only lightly for preferred ant type. - Pangolins play role in traditional medicine and
folklore ( are heavily exploited in some areas).
28African pangolins
- Manis tetradactyla (top)
- M. temmincki (bottom)
- 60cm, 7-15kg.
- Burrow well and climb OK.
- Eat mostly termites (plus some ants).
- Mother carries single young on back or curled in
tail. - Can ball up completely.
29Manis javanica an Asian pangolin
- Total length 80-90cm.
- Males are larger and are known to fight violently
over females. - Less armored than African species.
- An ant and termite predator estimated (uh, by
whom?) to take about 70 million insects per year.