South American marsupials have long been suspected to be ancestral to those of
Australia, consistent with the fact that the two continents were connected via
Antarctica in the early
Cenozoic. Australia's earliest known marsupial is
Djarthia, a primitive
mouse-like animal that lived in the early
Eocene about 55 million years ago (mya).
Djarthia had been identified as the earliest known australidelphian, and this research suggested that the monito del monte was the last of a
clade that included
Djarthia. This relationship suggests that the ancestors of the monito del monte might have reached South America by back-migration from Australia. The time of divergence between the monito del monte and Australian marsupials was estimated to have been 46 mya.
Dromiciops is thought to have evolved from members of the genus
Microbiotherium, known from the early Miocene of South America, with some authors considering the genera indistinguishable. All other genera, like
Pachybiotherium, had become extinct by the late Miocene. However, in 2010, analysis of
retrotransposon insertion sites in the
nuclear DNA of a variety of marsupials, while confirming the placement of the monito del monte in Australidelphia, also clarified that its
lineage is the most
basal of that superorder. The study further confirmed that the most basal of all marsupial orders are the other two South American lineages (
Didelphimorphia and
Paucituberculata, with the former probably branching first). This conclusion indicates that Australidelphia arose in South America (along with the ancestors of all other living marsupials), and probably reached Australia in a single
dispersal event after
Microbiotheria split off. Fossils of another Eocene australidelphian, the microbiotherian
Woodburnodon casei, have been described from the
Antarctic Peninsula, and fossils of a related early Eocene woodburnodontid have been found in
Patagonia. ==Habitat==