Australidelphia

Superorder of marsupials


title: "Australidelphia" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["australidelphia", "fauna-of-the-australasian-realm", "mammal-superorders", "extant-paleocene-first-appearances", "marsupials-of-australia", "marsupials", "metatheria", "paleocene-mammals-of-australia", "paleocene-mammals-of-oceania"] description: "Superorder of marsupials" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australidelphia" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Superorder of marsupials ::

| fossil_range = Early Paleocene to present | image = Sumpfwallabycele4.jpg | image_caption = A swamp wallaby | taxon = Australidelphia | authority = Szalay 1982 | subdivision_ranks = Orders | subdivision = * Microbiotheria

Within this superorder, the Australian members form a distinct group (clade) named Eomarsupialia, though their internal relationships (branching order) is yet to be determined. Studies suggest Australidelphia originated in South America alongside other major marsupial groups, likely dispersing to Australia via Antarctica in a single event after the monito's lineage (Microbiotheria) diverged, leaving other South American orders (Didelphimorphia and Paucituberculata) as more basal.

Phylogeny

The following cladogram is a phylogeny of Australidelphia based on the work of May-Collado, Kilpatrick & Agnarsson 2015, with extinct clades from Black et al. 2012. |label1=Australidelphia |1={{Clade |label1=Microbiotheria |1={{Clade |1=†Woodburnodontidae |2=Microbiotheriidae |label2=Eomarsupialia |2={{Clade |label1=Agreodontia |1={{Clade |label1=Notoryctemorphia |1=Notoryctidae |2={{Clade |label1=Peramelemorphia |1={{Clade |label1=†Yaraloidea |1=†Yaralidae |label2=Perameloidea |2={{Clade |1=Thylacomyidae |2={{Clade |1=Peramelidae |2={{Clade |1=†Chaeropodidae |2=Peroryctidae |label2=Dasyuromorphia |2={{Clade |1=†Thylacinidae |2={{Clade |1=Myrmecobiidae |2=Dasyuridae |label2=Diprotodontia |2={{Clade |label1=Vombatiformes |1={{Clade |label1=Phascolarctimorphia |1=Phascolarctidae |label2=Vombatimorphia |2={{Clade |1=†Thylacoleonidae |2={{Clade |1=?†Wynyardiidae |2=†Ilariidae |3={{Clade |1=†Maradidae |2={{Clade |1=Vombatidae |2={{Clade |1=†Palorchestidae |2=†Diprotodontidae |label2=Phalangerida |2={{Clade |label1=Phalangeriformes |1={{Clade |label1=Burramyoidea |1=Burramyidae |label2=Phalangeroidea |2={{Clade |1=Phalangeridae |2={{Clade |1=?†Pilkipildridae |2={{Clade |1=†Ektopodontidae |2=†Miralinidae |label2=Macropodiformes |2={{Clade |label1=Petauroidea |1={{Clade |1=Acrobatidae |2={{Clade |1=Tarsipedidae |2={{Clade |1=Petauridae |2=Pseudocheiridae |label2=Macropodoidea |2={{Clade |1=?†Balbaridae |2={{Clade |1=Hypsiprymnodontidae |2={{Clade |1=Potoroidae |2=Macropodidae

Taxonomy

The orders within this group are listed below:

References

References

  1. "PBDB".
  2. (2014). "The Osteology and Systematics of the Enigmatic Australian Oligo-Miocene Metatherian Yalkaparidon (Yalkaparidontidae; Yalkaparidontia; ?Australidelphia; Marsupialia)". Journal of Mammalian Evolution.
  3. Schiewe, Jessie. (2010-07-28). "Australia's marsupials originated in what is now South America, study says". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  4. (2010-07-27). "Tracking Marsupial Evolution Using Archaic Genomic Retroposon Insertions". [[PLOS Biology]].
  5. May-Collado. (2015). "Mammals from 'down under': a multi-gene species-level phylogeny of marsupial mammals (Mammalia, Metatheria).". [[PeerJ]].
  6. Black. (2012). "Earth and Life". Springer Netherlands.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

australidelphiafauna-of-the-australasian-realmmammal-superordersextant-paleocene-first-appearancesmarsupials-of-australiamarsupialsmetatheriapaleocene-mammals-of-australiapaleocene-mammals-of-oceania