Artiodactyl

Artiodactyl
(Greek artios,"even"; dactylos,"finger"
or "toe"), any member of the order of hoofed mammals, including
cattle, pigs, goats, giraffes, camels, deer, antelopes, and
hippopotamuses.
Cloven-hoofed ungulates, the major group of herbivorous mammals. About 150 species
all with compound stomachs and intestines enlarged for
plant digestion.
All artiodactyls, with the exception of the collared and
white-clipped peccaries, have an even number of toes on each foot. A
majority of species in the order are native to Africa, but they are well
represented in North and South America, Europe, and Asia. Australia has no
native artiodactyls.
All
members of the order support their weight on the tips of the third and
fourth toes. Their remote ancestors had five toes. Through evolutionary
modification, the first toe has disappeared completely, and the second and
fifth toes are only vestigial (nonfunctional) remnants. These small
appendages are located higher up on the foot than the terminal toes on
which the animals stand. The vestigial toes, sometimes called dewclaws,
serve no purpose except in pigs and caribou, preventing these animals from
sinking into soft ground.
Each
of the two large, supporting toes of artiodactyls terminates in a hoof.
The deceptive appearance of these two hooves gave rise to the biblical
term cloven hoof, which suggests erroneously that the two hooves
derive from a single large hoof. The hippopotamus, unique among
artiodactyls, has four toes of equal size and width.
Artiodactyls
feed almost exclusively on vegetation, except for pigs, which also feed on
eggs, small reptiles, worms, and carrion. Although artiodactyls lack upper
incisors, and most species lack upper canine teeth, they have a pad in the
upper jaw against which the lower teeth can operate. Artiodactyls rely
mainly on speed and keen senses to protect themselves from predators even
though most males have horns or antlers.
Artiodactyls
were first classified in a separate order by the British comparative
anatomist Richard Owen in 1847. The order is divided into three groups:
those that do not chew cud, such as pigs; cud chewers, including camels
and llamas; and true cud chewers with no upper front teeth. True cud
chewers consist of the chevrotains (small, hornless, deer-like animals), antelope, cattle, deer, and
giraffe.
Scientific
classification: Artiodactyls make up the order Artiodactyla. Those
that do not chew cud make up the suborder Suiformes, cud chewers make up
the suborder Tylopoda, and true cud chewers make up the suborder
Ruminantia.
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