Golden moles are fairly common throughout southern Africa, where 7 genera and around 18 species are known. They thrive in habitats ranging from deserts to swamps, where they are generally solitary and territorial. Golden moles dig and live in burrows, eating mainly invertebrates that they find underground. They appear similar to both the Talpidae ("true" moles) and the Notoryctidae (marsupial "moles") in that they have small ears that are hidden by their fur, short tails, and eyes are totally covered by skin. Large leathery pads on their noses probably help them to burrow through the ground, as do their short, powerful forearms and claws.
Golden moles are also unusual in that both males and females have a single opening (a cloaca) for the urogenital system. The skull is conical in outline. They have a pair of bones, called tabulars, in the occipital area of the skull, which are not found in other mammals. The zygomatic arches are formed by elongations of the maxillae. The malleus is tremendously enlarged, and it has been suggested that this actually aids hearing under ground (that is, the detection of ground-born vibrations). Golden moles have no fifth finger on their front paws, and most species have a huge claw on the third (and sometimes also the second) digit. Their fur has a beautiful iridescent sheen.
The dental formula of chrysochlorids is 3/3, 1/1, 3/3, 2-3/2-3 = 36-40. The first incisor is enlarged; the two lateral incisors and first premolars are canine-like; and the molars are zalambodont.
Golden moles burrow mainly using their leathery snout combined with thrusts of the forepaws, which are held under the body (rather than at the sides, as in the talpids). They are powerful and adept burrowers.
Chrysochlorids are known from Miocene deposits, but because these fossils resemble modern members of the family, they tell us little about the origins of the group.
chrysochloridae |
Family Erinaceidae Family Talpidae Family Solenodontidae Family Tenrecidae Family Chrysochloridae Family Soricidae<<<<<<<>>>>>>> ARTIODACTYLA CARNIVORA CETACEA CHIROPTERA DASYUROMORPHIA DERMOPTERA DIDELPHIMORPHI DIPROTODONTIA HYRACOIDEA INSECTIVORA LAGOMORPHA MACROSCELIDEA MICROBIOTHERIA MONOTREMATA NOTORYCTEMORPHIA PAUCITUBERCULATA PERAMELEMORPHIA PERISSODACTYLA PHOLIDOTA PRIMATES PROBOSCIDEA RODENTIA SCANDENTIA SIRENIA TUBULIDENTATA XENARTHRA
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