The Zoochat Photographic Guide to Tubulidentata

Hipporex

Well-Known Member
5+ year member
In recent times various Zoochatters have made Photographic Guides to a variety of different animals.
Including but not limited to...
But despite these many amazing thread I've been feeling like something was missing, but I couldn't quite put my finger on it...until now! It was Tublidentata all along! With a grand total of ONE family, ONE genus, and ONE species, Tubulidentata is without of doubt the most diverse of all modern mammalian orders. So how could we not give it a thread dedicated specifically to this order?!

Relations to other mammals
The animal (whose name will be revealed later) we now consider a part of Tublidentata was originally placed in the order Edentata, alongside anteaters. However the distinct teeth, alongside other morphological characteristics, has made it clear that this species is not closely related to any other living mammal. Since the 1870s, this animal has been in its own separate order: Tubulidentata. All similarities to anteaters have independently developed as adaptations to eating ants in a classic example of convergent evolution.

Living species (SO, SO MANY!!!)
1. Aardvark
Scientific Name: Orycteropus afer
Family: Orycteropodidae
Distribution: Sub-Saharan Africa
Habitat: Basically everywhere but rain forests
Length (Including Tail): Up to 6.6 feet (2.0 meters for you non-Americans)
Weight: 130 to 180 pounds (58.9 to 81.6 kilograms for you non-Americans)
Diet: Myrmecophagy (practicing of eating ant and termites) and the aardvark cucumber
Awake Cycle: Nocturnal
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(picture by @Jordan-Jaguar97)

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(picture by @bongorob)

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(picture by @csura999)

Wow that took a long time to talk about all those species. I appreciate you all for sticking around so long for me to finish this incredibly long thread.
 
Very nicely done. I didn't think anyone would actually take the time to cover such a wide and diverse group. And you did it very quickly too.



:D;):p
 
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