mouthporn.net
#species – @biomedicalephemera on Tumblr
Avatar

Biomedical Ephemera, or: A Frog for Your Boils

@biomedicalephemera / biomedicalephemera.tumblr.com

A blog for all biological and medical ephemera, from the age of Abraham through the era of medical quackery and cure-all nostrums. Featuring illustrations, history, and totally useless trivia from the diverse realms of nature and medicine. Buy me a coffee so I can stay up and keep the lights on around here!
Avatar
Avatar

The Procyonidae (The "Before-Dogs")

Procyonidae include the raccoons, coatis, cacomistles (ringtail "cats"), kinkajous and olingo/olinguitos. They're native to North and South America, and likely split off from the canids around 25 million years ago.

Many members of this family have distinctive facial markings and ringed tails, though the olingos and kinkajous do not. The kinkajous have prehensile tails, which is a trait shared with only one other carnivoran, the binturong ("bearcat") of South-East Asia.

These species are members of the superfamily Musteloidea, which includes red pandas, weasels, and skunks. Well, it might. Current phylogenetic studies seem to indicate that this might not be a truly-related group, but for now they're still classified together.

Despite being members of the Caniforma ("dog-shaped") suborder, which are members of the Carnivora, the Procyonidae don't have any carnassal teeth - part of their more-omnivorous opportunistic diet, compared to the rest of their suborder. Carnassal teeth are needed for ripping and shredding flesh, and are essential in hunters like wolves and bears. While each species of the Procyonidae has preferred foods, they're not obligate consumers of any one thing, allowing them to adapt and survive in an increasingly-urban world.

Images:

The Quadrupeds of North America. John James Audubon, 1851

Avatar
Avatar

Carnivora!

All members of the order Carnivora fall into one of two sub-orders: Feliformia (cat-like), or Caniformia (dog-like). Outward appearance of carnivora can be deceiving; most people would classify the hyena and aard-wolf as "dog-like", while the weasels and pole-martens are commonly considered "cat-like", which they are not.

The Feliformidae are obligate carnivores; that is, they must eat meat to survive, as their body cannot produce one or more nutrients that cannot be found in plants, or that their digestive tracts cannot absorb large amounts of non-animal matter. They are not all hypercarnivorans (meat making up >70% of the diet), however. The order Feliformia includes all of the cats (Felidae), mongooses and meerkats (Herpestidae), hyenas (Hyaenidae), civets and genets (Viverridae), as well as two very small families: the Nandiniidae, which contains only the African palm civet; and the Prionodontidae, which contains the two Asiatic linsangs. 

Caniformidae include the seals, sea lions, and walruses (Pinnipedia); true dogs (Canidae); bears (Ursidae); skunks (Mephitidae); badgers, weasels, and otters (Mustelidae); raccoons, coatis, and kinkajous (Procyonidae); and the family containing only the red panda (Ailuridae).

Most Caniformidae (except for the Canidae, interestingly enough) are plantigrade - that is, they walk on all of their podial and tarsal bones on the ground at the same time. This affords greater stability and weight-bearing ability and is helpful when standing your ground or trying to balance in trees.

The Feliformidae (and the true dogs, or Canidae) are almost completely digitigrade - they walk on just their finger and toe bones, and have elongated "heel" bones and Achilles tendons. Digitigrade animals can move much more quickly and quietly than plantigrade animals, and their specialized "heels" allow for spring-type motion, like what you see in cats. 

Huge h/t to the ever-awesome Emily Graslie of The Brain Scoop for finding the words to simplify something I've wanted to post on for a while ;D Go watch The Brain Scoop and get smart!

Images from: [Wolverine, Walrus] American Animals. Witmer Stone and William Everett Cram, 1902.

[Spotted Hyena, California Sea Lion] The Book of the Animal Kingdom: Mammals. W. Percivall Westell, 1910.

[Black-Footed Ferret, Polar Bear] Quadrupeds of North America. John James Audubon, 1851.

[Kinkajou, Lion] Dictionnaire Universel d'Histoire Naturelle. M. Charles d'Orbigny, 1849.

Avatar
Avatar

Scientific Terminology: Taxonomy and Nomenclature 101

The origins of medical terms are interesting enough, but Greek and Latin roots are used throughout the sciences, and around here, you'll see them a lot when it comes to species names. There are some interesting ones out there, with some bizarre (and sometimes humorous) meanings...

But first! Some taxonomy basics:

Setting aside phylogeny-specific nomenclature and cladistics for now, Linnaean taxonomy is the system of naming species that has been used since, well, Carl Linnaeus. A "taxon" (plural taxa) is simply a grouping of one or more organisms, judged to belong to the same unit based on any number of qualifications. 

Though current "Linnaean taxonomy" (which is what's commonly used in schools and in general literature) differs significantly from Linnaeus' original three-kingdom, five-level, ranked classifications, it's still known by that name and takes many of the concepts from it, such as hierarchical classification. Thanks to the popularity of Linnaeus' 1735 work, Systema Naturae, a solid foundation for modern taxonomy was put in place, with an organized system, and short, understandable, scientific names.

Taxonomy today:

Currently, animal species are organized according to rules set down by the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, to ensure uniformity across the zoological community. Plants and bacteria follow different naming codes, but those are less relevant here.

This is a basic schematic demonstrating the hierarchical system that's used when we classify a species:

According to the ICZN, the basic rank is that of species. The next most important rank is that of genus: when an organism is given a species name it is assigned to a genus, and the genus name is part of the species name. Species and genus were both seen by Linnaeus as "God-given"/"natural". Anything above genus was considered a construct made by man to more easily classify the world around him.

The third-most important rank, although it was not used by Linnaeus, is that of family. Even though family is important in understanding the classification of an animal, it is not used in the "scientific name", nor are any of the higher levels in its classification.

So what's a "scientific name?"

The italicized names that you see in scientific literature (and around here) refer to the specific species of a creature, and are called the binomen; that is, "two names". Those two names are the genus (first, and capitalized) and the species (second, never capitalized, even when named after a proper noun). An example of a binomen would be Choloepus hoffmanni - the genus is Choloepus, the two-toed sloths, and the species is Choloepus hoffmanni, Hoffmann's two-toed sloth.

Sometimes there are three names, or the trinomen of a creature. These tell you, first, the genus, second, the species, and third, the subspecies. Take the trinomen Choloepus hoffmanni pallescens. The genus is Choloepus, the species is Choloepus hoffmanni, and the subspecies is Choloepus hoffmanni pallescens, the Peruvian two-toed sloth.

Though you only are told the two (or three) most specific taxonomic groupings for a creature, you can use those (and a phylogenetic tree) to figure out all of the less-specific (Linnaean) taxa it belongs to, such as its Family, Order, Class, and Phylum.

What does the scientific name actually mean, though?

Often, the scientific name describes notable or distinguishing characteristics about a species, that you can decode (scientific terminology time!). Let's take the species Cyclopes didactylus. The first name given tells us that this creature belongs to the genus Cyclopes - "Circle-foot". Within that genus, the species name is Cyclopes didactylus (abbreviated C. didactylus after the first use), and yes, you do repeat the genus name in the species name, by ICZN guidelines. On its own, "didactylus" can be broken down to the roots of di-, dactyl, -(o)us. "Having two fingers." So the binominal can be deciphered as "Circle-foot having two fingers."

Circle-foot two-fingers! (aka the Silky or Pygmy Anteater)

This descriptive-type species name is not the only way scientists assign taxa, though.

For everything above genus, the taxa are fairly regulated/already-determined, are not easy to add and subtract from, and have strict naming guidelines. From genus on down, though, so long as what you've discovered is verified as a new species (or group of species falling together as a genus), congratulations! You have the honor of naming it. Well, assuming it's not patently offensive, vulgar, or unpronounceable. The ICZN approval board or the equivalent for your field has final say on whether or not a species can be given a submitted name.

Still, there are many ways to name a new species. You can name it in reference to physical characteristics, location found, a specific person or group, or even an ironic joke or pun. Look at the name Linnaeus gave the Blue Whale: Balaenoptera musculis. Balaenoptera = "Baleen-winged", ok, they have huge fins and baleen, so that makes sense.  Musculis = "little mouse". Har har har.

"Musculis" can also refer to "muscle," but given that Linnaeus was given to puns and double-meanings, he was well aware of the "little mouse" definition.

Notes:

**Though the specific epithet for a species can be used in more than one genus, genus names must remain absolutely unique, in accordance with ICZN rules. Ex. Since you can have more than one species with the didactylus epithet, Cyclopes didactylus and Inimicus didactylus are both valid names - though you really don't want to mix up the silky anteater with the "devil stinger"/lumpfish.

**When the specific species is not known, the abbreviation "sp." is used after the genus name. Ex. Lutra sp. refers to either Lutra lutra OR Lutra sumatrana, but it's unknown as to which one. When multiple species within a genus are being referred to (or the specific species is unimportant), the abbreviation "spp." is used after the genus name. Ex. Lutra spp. refers to BOTH Lutra lutra AND Lutra sumatrana.

Additional resources:

Source: msu.edu
You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net