Bettong

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Bettongs[1]
Eastern bettong
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Diprotodontia
Family: Potoroidae
Subfamily:
Potoroinae
Genus: Bettongia
J. E. Gray, 1837
Type species
Bettongia setosa
, 1837
Species

Bettongs, species of the

potoroine marsupials once common in Australia. They are important ecosystem engineers displaced during the colonisation of the continent, and are vulnerable to threatening factors such as altered fire regimes, land clearing, pastoralism
and introduced predatory species such as the fox and cat.

Conservation status

All species of the genus have been severely affected by ecological changes since the European settlement of Australia. Those that have not become extinct became largely confined to islands and protected reserves and are dependent on re-population programs. The diversity of the genus was poorly understood before their extirpation from the mainland, and new taxa have been identified in specimens newly discovered and already held in museum collections.[2] In 2021 August, 40 bettongs were released in different parts of South Australia after being raised in captivity to increase their numbers.[3]

Taxonomy

Four extant species are recognised in the work Mammal Species of the World (2005):[1]

In addition, at least three extinct species are known:

The phylogeny of the genus has seen a grouping of 'brush-tailed' taxa allied within the genus Bettongia, and this includes the extant species

B. penicillata.[2]

A conservative arrangement of modern and fossil taxa of Bettongia may be summarised as[6]

  • family Potoroidae:
  • subfamily †Bulungamayinae
  • subfamily †
    Palaeopotoroinae
  • subfamily
    Potoroinae
  • genus
    Aepyprymnus
  • genus Bettongia
  • species †Bettongia anhydra
  • species
    Bettongia gaimardi
  • species
    Bettongia lesueur
  • species †Bettongia moyesi
  • species
    Bettongia penicillata
  • species †
    Bettongia pusilla
  • species
    Bettongia tropica


The species

Aepyprymnus rufescens is referred to as the rufous bettong,[7]
despite not being a member of the genus Bettongia.

See also

  • heteromyid
    rodent of North America

References

  1. ^
    OCLC 62265494
    .
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ "Endangered bettongs return to SA after more than a century".
  4. ^ Wakefield, N.A. (1967). "Some taxonomie revision in the Australian marsupial genus Bettongia (Macropodidae), with description of a new species". The Victorian Naturalist. 84: 8–22.
  5. ^ Flannery, T.F. and Archer, M, 1987. Bettongia moyesi, a new and plesiomorphic kangaroo (Marsupialia: Potoridae) from Miocene sediments of northwestern Queensland. ‘Possums and Opossums: Studies in Evolution’, Pp.759–67. ed. M. Archer. Surrey Beatty & Sons and the Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, Sydney pdf
  6. .
  7. .