Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae

The Mammalia in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae forms one of six classes of animals in Carl Linnaeus's tenth reformed edition written in Latin.

The following explanations are based on William Turton's translations who rearranged and corrected earlier editions published by Johann Friedrich Gmelin, Johan Christian Fabricius and Carl Ludwig Willdenow:

Animals that suckle their young by means of lactiferous teats. In external and internal structure they resemble man: most of them are quadrupeds; and with man, their natural enemy, inhabit the surface of the Earth. The largest, though fewest in number, inhabit the ocean.

Linnaeus divided the mammals based on the number, situation, and structure of their teeth; mammals have the following characteristics:

  • Heart: two auricles, 2 ventricles. Warm, dark red blood;
  • Lungs: respires alternately;
  • Jaw: incombent, covered. Teeth usually within jaw;
  • Teats: lactiferous;
  • Organs of sense: tongue, nostrils, eyes, ears, and papillae of the skin;
  • Covering: hair, which is scanty in warm climates, hardly any on aquatics;
  • Supports: four feet, except in aquatics; and in most a tail. Walks on the Earth and speaks.

Oldfield Thomas scrutinized Linnaeus's chapter on mammals in 1911 and attempted to find missing type species and type localities.

Primates

Primates have four cutting upper parallel fore-teeth, except in some bat species which have two or none; solitary tusks in each jaw, one on each side; two pectoral teats; two feet and hands; flattened, oval nails; and they eat fruits.

  • Homo sapiens
    • Homo americanus
    • Homo europaeus
    • Homo asiaticus
    • Homo afer
    • Homo monstrosus
  • Homo troglodytes – partly based on myth, partly on orangutans
Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
A Barbary macaque on the Rock of Gibraltar
Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
A captive Diana monkey
Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
A ring-tailed lemur

Bruta

Bruta do not have fore-teeth, but tusks, feet with strong hoof-like nails; move slowly and eat mostly masticated vegetables.

Ferae

Ferae usually have six conic fore-teeth in each jaw, longer tusks, grinders with conic projections, feet with subulate claws, and feed on carcasses and prey on other animals.

Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
An eastern spotted skunk

Bestiae

Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
A wild boar

Bestiae have indefinite numbers of fore-teeth on the sides, always one extra canine, an elongate nose used to dig out juicy roots and vermin.

Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
Brazilian three-banded armadillo in Edmonton Zoo

Glires

Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
An Indian rhinoceros

Glires have two cutting fore-teeth in each jaw, but no tusks, feet with claws formed for running and bounding, and eat bark, roots, and vegetables, which they gnaw.

Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
A southern flying squirrel
Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
A Siberian flying squirrel

Pecora

Pecora do not have upper, not many lower cutting fore-teeth, hoofed, cloven feet, and feed on herbs which they pluck, chewing the cud; four stomachs, a paunch for macerating and ruminating food, a bonnet for reticulating and receiving it, an omasus or maniplies of numerous folds for digesting it, and an abomasus or caille, fasciate, for giving it acescency and preventing putrefaction.

Bellua

Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae 
A hippopotamus

Bellua have obtuse fore-teeth, hoofed feet, move heavily, and feed on vegetables.

Cete

Cete have some cartilaginous, some bony teeth, no nostrils but a fistulous opening in the anterior and upper part of the head, pectoral fins instead of feet, horizontal, flattened tails, no claws, live in the ocean, and feed on mollusca and fish.

    Monodon
  • Physeter catodon – either Beluga or sperm whale
  • Physeter macrocephalus sperm whale
  • Physeter miscrops
  • Physeter tursio – possibly a mystical animal
    Delphinus

References

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Mammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae PrimatesMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae BrutaMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae FeraeMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae BestiaeMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae GliresMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae PecoraMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae BelluaMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema Naturae CeteMammalia In The 10Th Edition Of Systema NaturaeCarl LinnaeusCarl Ludwig WilldenowJohan Christian FabriciusJohann Friedrich GmelinLatinWilliam Turton

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