The Ascent of Mammals

How DNA Discoveries are Rewriting our Story

I boken utforsker John Reilly den felles historien til de tre hovedgruppene av pattedyr: kloakkdyr (som legger egg), pungdyr og placentale pattedyr (som oss mennesker).

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Produktnummer: 830016 Kategorier: ,
Utgivelsesår: 2026-03
Antall sider: 382
Fotos – illustrasjoner: Fargebilder og s/h illustrasjoner
Innbinding: Innbundet
ISBN: 9781784276324
Språk: Engelsk
Serie: Pelagic Monographs
Forlag: Pelagic Publishing
Forfatter: John Reilly
  • Discover how revolutionary discoveries in genomics are reshaping our understanding of mammalian evolution.
  • Describes the evolution and speciation of the world’s 6,400-plus living mammals.
  • Reveals how past terrestrial and oceanic dispersals have shaped the mammalian world.

How did the thousands of different mammal species on the planet today evolve from a shrew-like, nocturnal insectivore that lived 200 million years ago? What allowed our ancestors to survive the cataclysmic impact that wiped out the dinosaurs and become one of the most successful lineages on Earth? How did mammals adapt to myriad lifestyles and populate every corner of the globe, from oceans and deserts to tropical forests and mountains?

In The Ascent of Mammals, acclaimed science writer John Reilly weaves a tapestry of stories about the fascinating shared history of the egg-laying monotremes, the pouch-bearing marsupials and the ubiquitous placentals – including Homo sapiens – that make up the mammalian world. Drawing from the cascade of unforeseen insights into evolution provided by modern genetics research, Reilly describes the development of key mammalian traits (such as mammary glands, warm-bloodedness and a three-boned middle ear) as well as species-specific adaptations. The book explores the intriguing geographical origins and ancient global dispersal routes of many mammalian families, as well as the discoveries of unexpected kinships that have required family trees to be redrawn.

Each chapter centres on a particular species and a specific evolutionary mechanism – including gene duplication, gene loss, hybridisation, imprinting, pseudogenes and retrogenes – considering their relevance for evolution on a broader scale. Accessibly written and complemented by illustrations and colour photographs, this is a groundbreaking account of science’s ability to unravel the truth about mammals.

Table of Contents

Prologue: Linnaeus’s legacy

PART ONE: MONOTREMES
1. The Platypus’s Story: Monotremes oviparous, ovum meroblastic

PART TWO: MARSUPIALS
2. The Monito del Monte’s Story: The marsupial diaspora
3. The Marsupial Mole’s Story: Austral doppelgängers
4. The Tasmanian Tiger’s Story: De-extinction

PART THREE: EUTHERIANS
5. The Aardvark’s Story: Evolutionary distinctiveness
6. The Hyrax’s Story: Aquatic origins
7. The Elephant’s Story: Admixtures, ratchets and retrogenes
8. The Sloth’s Story: Regressive evolution and pseudogenes
9. The Solenodon’s Story: EDGE scores, venom and the K–Pg event
10. The Camel’s Story: High latitudes and domestication
11. The Whale’s Story: Loss of gene function
12. The Buffalo’s Story: Adaptability and domestication
13. The Giraffe’s Story: Comparative genomics
14. The Horse’s Story: A bushy phylogeny
15. The Bear’s Story: Inter-species gene flow
16. The Cat’s Story: Dispersals and bottlenecks
17. The Bat’s Story: Powered flight and echolocation
18. The Rat’s Story: Extreme evolution
19. The Lemur’s Story: Sweepstake dispersal
20. The Tarsier’s Story: Speciation genes
21. The Howler Monkey’s Story: Trade-offs, reinforcement and duplications
22. The Gibbon’s Story: Jumping genes
23. The Gorilla’s Story: Ghost admixtures
24. The Bonobo’s Story: Vicariance, neoteny and genetic fossils
25. The Human Story: Palaeogenomics and adaptive introgressions

Epilogue: The descent of mammals
Glossary
Dramatis Personae
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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