ungulate$87496$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το ungulate$87496$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι ungulate$87496$ - ορισμός

TAXON OF MAMMALS
Meridiungulate; Meridiungulates; Sudamericungulata; Meridiungulata; South American native ungulate

ungulate         
  • Skeleton of ''[[Ambulocetus natans]]'', a stem whale
  • 50 px
  • arctocyonid]]
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • [[Blue whale]]
  • 50 px
  • [[Cladogram]] showing relationships within Ungulata<ref name=Spauldingetal2009/>
  • 50 px
  • [[Common dolphin]]
  • 50 px
  • [[Black rhinoceros]]
  • The anatomy of a dolphin]], showing its skeleton, major organs, tail, and body shape
  • [[Père David's deer]]
  • 50 px
  • Restoration of ''[[Eurohippus parvulus]]'', a mid- to late Eocene equid of Europe ([[Natural History Museum, Berlin]])
  • 50 px
  • [[Hippopotamus]]
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • Restoration of ''Mesonyx''
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • Velvet]] covers a growing antler and provides it with blood, supplying oxygen and nutrients.
  • 50 px
  • date=March 2009}}</ref>
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • ''[[Uintatherium anceps]]'', a dinoceratan
  • 50 px
  • [[Pacific white-sided dolphin]] skeleton (missing [[pelvic bones]]), on exhibit at [[The Museum of Osteology]], [[Oklahoma City, Oklahoma]]
  • [[Plains zebra]]
  • 50 px
GROUP OF TETRAPODS THAT USE THE TIPS OF THEIR TOES OR HOOFS TO WALK ON
Ungulates; Unguligrade; Ungulata; True ungulate; Hoofed mammals; Hooved mammals; Euungulata; Ungulate evolution; Hooved animals; Hooved animal; Hooved mammal; Euungulate; Evolution of ungulates; Hoofed animal; Evolutionary history of ungulates
a.
1.
Hoof-shaped.
2.
Hoof-bearing.
ungulate         
  • Skeleton of ''[[Ambulocetus natans]]'', a stem whale
  • 50 px
  • arctocyonid]]
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • [[Blue whale]]
  • 50 px
  • [[Cladogram]] showing relationships within Ungulata<ref name=Spauldingetal2009/>
  • 50 px
  • [[Common dolphin]]
  • 50 px
  • [[Black rhinoceros]]
  • The anatomy of a dolphin]], showing its skeleton, major organs, tail, and body shape
  • [[Père David's deer]]
  • 50 px
  • Restoration of ''[[Eurohippus parvulus]]'', a mid- to late Eocene equid of Europe ([[Natural History Museum, Berlin]])
  • 50 px
  • [[Hippopotamus]]
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • Restoration of ''Mesonyx''
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • Velvet]] covers a growing antler and provides it with blood, supplying oxygen and nutrients.
  • 50 px
  • date=March 2009}}</ref>
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • ''[[Uintatherium anceps]]'', a dinoceratan
  • 50 px
  • [[Pacific white-sided dolphin]] skeleton (missing [[pelvic bones]]), on exhibit at [[The Museum of Osteology]], [[Oklahoma City, Oklahoma]]
  • [[Plains zebra]]
  • 50 px
GROUP OF TETRAPODS THAT USE THE TIPS OF THEIR TOES OR HOOFS TO WALK ON
Ungulates; Unguligrade; Ungulata; True ungulate; Hoofed mammals; Hooved mammals; Euungulata; Ungulate evolution; Hooved animals; Hooved animal; Hooved mammal; Euungulate; Evolution of ungulates; Hoofed animal; Evolutionary history of ungulates
['??gj?l?t, -le?t]
¦ noun Zoology a hoofed mammal.
Origin
C19: from late L. ungulatus, from L. ungula 'hoof'.
Ungulata         
  • Skeleton of ''[[Ambulocetus natans]]'', a stem whale
  • 50 px
  • arctocyonid]]
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • [[Blue whale]]
  • 50 px
  • [[Cladogram]] showing relationships within Ungulata<ref name=Spauldingetal2009/>
  • 50 px
  • [[Common dolphin]]
  • 50 px
  • [[Black rhinoceros]]
  • The anatomy of a dolphin]], showing its skeleton, major organs, tail, and body shape
  • [[Père David's deer]]
  • 50 px
  • Restoration of ''[[Eurohippus parvulus]]'', a mid- to late Eocene equid of Europe ([[Natural History Museum, Berlin]])
  • 50 px
  • [[Hippopotamus]]
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • Restoration of ''Mesonyx''
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • Velvet]] covers a growing antler and provides it with blood, supplying oxygen and nutrients.
  • 50 px
  • date=March 2009}}</ref>
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • 50 px
  • ''[[Uintatherium anceps]]'', a dinoceratan
  • 50 px
  • [[Pacific white-sided dolphin]] skeleton (missing [[pelvic bones]]), on exhibit at [[The Museum of Osteology]], [[Oklahoma City, Oklahoma]]
  • [[Plains zebra]]
  • 50 px
GROUP OF TETRAPODS THAT USE THE TIPS OF THEIR TOES OR HOOFS TO WALK ON
Ungulates; Unguligrade; Ungulata; True ungulate; Hoofed mammals; Hooved mammals; Euungulata; Ungulate evolution; Hooved animals; Hooved animal; Hooved mammal; Euungulate; Evolution of ungulates; Hoofed animal; Evolutionary history of ungulates
·noun ·pl An extensive group of mammals including all those that have hoofs. It comprises the Artiodactyla and Perissodactyla.

Βικιπαίδεια

South American native ungulates

South American native ungulates, commonly abbreviated as SANUs, are extinct ungulate-like mammals of controversial affinities that were indigenous to South America prior to the Great American Biotic Interchange. They comprise five major groups conventionally ranked as orders—Astrapotheria, Litopterna, Notoungulata, Pyrotheria, and Xenungulata—as well as the primitive "condylarth" groups Didolodontidae and Kollpaniinae. It has been proposed that some or all of the members of this group form a clade, named Meridiungulata, though the relationships of South American ungulates remain largely unresolved. The two largest groups of South American ungulates, the notoungulates and the litopterns, were the only groups to persist beyond the mid Miocene. Only a few of the largest species of notoungulates and litopterns survived until the end-Pleistocene extinctions.

Though most SANUs lived in South America, astrapotheres and litopterns are known from Eocene aged deposits in the Antarctic Peninsula and the notoungulate Mixotoxodon spread as far north as what is now Texas during the Great American Biotic Interchange.