Sex down under: the differentiation of sexual dimorphisms during marsupial development
Marilyn B. Renfree, Andrew J. Pask and Geoffrey Shaw
Reproduction, Fertility and Development
13(8) 679 - 690
Published: 08 February 2002
Abstract
Marsupials have many characteristic features that make them ideal models to study the control of sexual differentiation and development. They are distinguished from eutherian mammals in their mode of reproduction and their greater dependence on the teat and mammary gland than on the placenta for development. They give birth to a highly altricial young which completes its development while firmly attached to a teat, usually within the confines of a pouch. At birth, the marsupial neonate has a well-developed digestive, respiratory and circulatory system, but retains its fetal excretory system with a fully functional mesonephric kidney and undifferentiated gonads and genitalia.https://doi.org/10.1071/RD01096
© CSIRO 2002