The marsupial family Dasyuridae has a history of study extending from 18th-century naturalists to the modern genomics era. The Evolution of Dasyurid Marsupials: Systematics and Family History tells the story of dasyurid evolution as it unfolded in the context of changing world views on biodiversity, biotic history and scientific methodology, from its roots in Enlightenment taxonomy to its transformation by the Darwinian and Hennigian revolutions, and then its maturation as statistical phylogenetics and phylogenomics.
Research on dasyurids includes every major approach in animal systematics, including some for which few comparable examples exist. It extends beyond the recent consensus on species relationships to include the timing of diversification, historical biogeography and the evolution of key phenotypic traits. This book introduces readers to living and fossil dasyurids, the questions evolutionary biologists have asked about them, the inferential methods used to answer those questions and the implications of those answers for understanding the history of this fascinating marsupial family. It offers a comprehensive synthesis of dasyurid evolutionary biology for students, teachers and researchers in mammalian evolution and marsupial biology.
1. Dasyurids and 'tree thinking'
2. The diversity of dasyurids
3. Dasyurid phylogeny: morphological taxonomy from Linnaeus to Archer
4. Dasyurid phylogeny: molecular systematics, 1977-2003
5. Dasyurid phylogeny: integrative studies
6. Dasyurid species-level relationships
7. Dasyurid species recognition
8. Dasyuromorphian families and fossils
9. The timing of dasyurid evolution
10. Dasyurid macroevolution
11. Evolution of the dasyurid phenotype
12. Dasyurids past, present and future
Appendix: colour images
References
Index
Carey Krajewski is a retired zoology professor and molecular systematist who has studied the phylogenetics of mammals and birds for over 35 years. He is the author of 36 peer-reviewed publications describing research on phylogenetic relationships of marsupials, primarily members of Dasyuridae.
Michael Westerman is an Adjunct Professor in the School of Agriculture, Biomedicine and Environment at La Trobe University. He is an evolutionary geneticist who has worked on phylogenetic relationships of marsupials for 50 years, publishing over 130 peer-reviewed papers on dasyurids, bandicoots and macropods.
Patricia A. Woolley, AM, is an Emeritus Scholar in the School of Agriculture, Biomedicine and Environment at La Trobe University. Her primary research interest is the reproductive biology of dasyurid marsupials. She is a recipient of the Outstanding Achievement Award of the Society of Women Geographers and the Ellis Troughton Memorial Award and an honorary life member of both the Australian Mammal Society and the American Society of Mammalogists.