(Redirected from Placental)
'Eutheria'
[1] is a
taxon containing the
placental
mammals, such as
humans. The
sister group of Eutheria is
Metatheria, which includes
marsupials and their extinct relatives.
The name Eutheria comes from the
Greek words ''eu-'' "well-developed" and ''ther'' "beast". When Eutheria was introduced by
Thomas Henry Huxley in
1880, he meant for it to be more broad in definition than its precursor 'Placentalia'. Some use Eutheria as a
total group which includes the
crown group Placentalia and extinct mammals which are closer to Placentalia than to
Marsupialia.
Nevertheless, all Eutherians are placental mammals. This means that a Eutherian
fetus is nourished during gestation by a
placenta. Eutherians are also
viviparous, meaning that the offspring are carried in the mother's
womb until fully developed.
Because of this, Eutherians are different from other mammal groups such as
monotremes and
marsupials which are not placental. Monotremes, for instance, lay
eggs which protect developing young until they are fully developed. Marsupials give birth to partially-developed young who then migrate to a special
pouch in the mother's body in which the young continue their development. (Some exceptions do exist.
Bandicoots for instance, which are marsupials, develop small placenta-like structures during gestation.)
The earliest known eutherian species is the extinct ''
Eomaia scansoria'' from the Lower
Cretaceous of
China. It is undoubtedly a member of Eutheria, but the hips of the animal were too narrowly built to have allowed the birth of well-developed young. Thus it is unlikely that a placenta greatly contributed to the development of Eomaia scansoria's young before they were born.
Members of Eutheria are found on all continents and in all oceans.
See also
★
List of placental mammals
★
Mammal for classification.
★
Theria
Compare and contrast
★
Metatheria
★
Prototheria
Notes and references
1. Today Placentalia and Eutheria are sometimes considered to be the same group. But there are proposals of classification (McKenna & Bell, 1997) that differentiate between the two groups.