2 GENERAL SURVEY OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM* 



atterwards notice in detail. Most mammals are suited foi 

 life on land, but diverse types, such as seals, whales, and sea- 

 cows, have taken to the water. In another direction the 

 bats are markedly adapted for aerial life. 



Among the mammalian characteristics of great import- 

 ance are those which relate to the bearing of young, and 

 even a brief consideration of these shows that some 

 mammals are distinguished from others by differences 

 deeper than those which separate whales from carnivores, 

 or rodents from bats. These deep differences may be 

 stated briefly as follows : (a) Before birth most young 

 mammals are very closely united (by a complex structure 



FIG. I. Duckmole (Ornithorhynchus). 



called the placenta) to the mothers who bear them, (b) But 

 this close connection between mother and unborn young 

 is of rare occurrence, or only hinted at, in the pouched 

 animals or Marsupials, which bring forth their young in a 

 peculiarly helpless condition, as it were prematurely, and in 

 most cases place them in an external pouch, within which 

 they are sheltered and nourished, (c) In the Australian 

 duckmole and its two relatives, the placental connection is 

 quite absent, for these animals lay eggs as birds and most 

 reptiles do. These differences and others relating to 

 structure warrant the division of Mammals into three sub- 

 classes : 



(a) Eutheria, Monodelphia, or Placentals those in which there is 

 a close (placental) union between the unborn embryo and its 

 mother, e.g. Ungulates, Carnivores, Monkeys. 



