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- Newsgroups: soc.singles
- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!news.UVic.CA!ugly!atovorni
- From: atovorni@engr.UVic.CA (dreas)
- Subject: Re: ISO MY PRINCESS
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.213647.28825@sol.UVic.CA>
- Sender: news@sol.UVic.CA
- Nntp-Posting-Host: ugl-gw.uvic.ca
- Reply-To: atovorni@engr.UVic.CA
- Organization: University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada
- References: <By66o0.Cwn@access.digex.com>
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 92 21:36:47 GMT
- Lines: 68
-
- In article Cwn@access.digex.com, huston@access.digex.com (Herb Huston) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov22.035448.6142@sol.UVic.CA> atovorni@engr.UVic.CA writes:
- >>In article Iy8@access.digex.com, huston@access.digex.com (Herb Huston) writes:
- >>>In article <1992Nov20.002845.20217@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> cjp8b@dayhoff.med.Virginia.EDU (Chris Penington) writes:
- >>>>Are eu therious? Marsupials don't even make it into the placentile
- >>>>rankings. They've adapted to a different set of test conditions and
- >>>>fail marsupially (and monotremously) in competition with many
- >>>>placentals. Theriously!
- >>>
- >>>Virginia oppossums beg to differ with you, sir! Not only did their South
- >>>American relatives survive the invasion of North American placentals, but they
- >>>successfully invaded the placental stronghold. (And the crawlspace underneath
- >>>the parental abode in Florida.)
- >
- >Opossums are marsupials. (Sorry about the earlier misspelling.)
- >
- >>>> Cats and rats are major problems for
- >>>>Australia's native fauna.
- >>>
- >>>As they are for New Zealand's non-marsupial, native fauna. Living on an
- >>>island, even one the size of a continent, is not conducive to developing
- >>>effective defense strategies. But how, sir, did those placentals swim to
- >>>either Australia or New Zealand?
- >>
- >>In order to answer this I have to relate back to my studies of Plate Tectonics.
- >>Australia was once connected to the rest of the world by land. Did you ever hear
- >>of Pangea? The pangean continent broke apart and Australia drifted away from the
- >>rest of the world before the evolution of placentals. Placentals evolved in the
- >>rest of the world while Australia was not connected to it by land.
- >
- >Australia was connected to Antartica and South America and has been drifting
- >toward Asia. It has not yet collided. How did cats and rats reach Australia?
- >To help you out, I'll tell you that when Europeans arrived, the only placental
- >mammals in Australia were the aborgines, the dingos, and bats (rather obvious
- >how the bats got there).
- >
- >>Marsupials were overrun by placentals in the rest of the world because placentals
- >>were better equipped to compete for food & survival.
- >
- >This is not true. South America's marsupials were already in decline when
- >the Isthmus of Panama formed, but there are still plenty of marsupials in
- >South America, and many South American marsupials successfully invaded North
- >America.
- >
- >> Cats, rats & rabbits are
- >>doing to Australia's marsupial population today what placentals did to marsupials
- >>in the rest of the world a long time ago.
- >
- >But how did the cats, rats, and rabbits swim to Australia?
-
- They came on ships with the Europeans. Rats infested sailing vessels back in the
- days when Botany Bay was founded. Cats were on the ships to help control the rat
- population. Rabbits were imported when Australian hunters wanted to hunt familiar
- European game. I believe foxes were imported for the same purpose...
-
- >>Guess my geology degree is good for something after all...
- >
- >Your geology is quite sound, but this is also a question of zoology.
-
- I hope I'm not pretending to know everything. ;+)
-
- >Marsupials are not second-class mammals.
-
- Never claimed that they were. Just twisted a few facts inadvertently.
- Thanks for clearing THAT up.
-
- dreas
-
-