Treeshrews were moved from the order
Insectivora into the order
Primates because of certain internal similarities to primates (for example, similarities in the
brain anatomy, highlighted by Sir
Wilfrid Le Gros Clark), and classified as a "primitive
prosimian", however they were soon split from the primates and moved into their own
order. Taxonomists continue to refine the treeshrews' relations to primates and to other closely related clades.
Molecular phylogenetic studies have suggested that the treeshrews, with the primates and the
flying lemurs (colugos), belong to the
grandorder Euarchonta. According to this classification, the Euarchonta are sister to the
Glires (
lagomorphs and
rodents), and the two groups are combined into the
superorder Euarchontoglires. However, the alternative placement of treeshrews as sister to both Glires and
Primatomorpha cannot be ruled out. }} Several other arrangements of these orders have been proposed in the past, and the above tree is only one of several proposals. The exact phylogenetic position is not yet considered resolved: it may be a sister of Glires, Primatomorpha, or
Dermoptera, or separate from and sister to all other Euarchontoglires. Shared
short interspersed nuclear elements (SINEs) offer evidence for Scandentia belonging to the Euarchonta group:
Order Scandentia The 23
species are placed in four
genera, which are divided into two families. The majority are in the "ordinary" treeshrew family,
Tupaiidae, but one species, the
pen-tailed treeshrew, is different enough to warrant placement in its own family,
Ptilocercidae; the two families are thought to have separated 60 million years ago. ;Family
Tupaiidae: • Genus
Anathana •
Madras treeshrew,
A. ellioti • Genus
Dendrogale •
Bornean smooth-tailed treeshrew,
D. melanura •
Northern smooth-tailed treeshrew,
D. murina • Genus
Tupaia •
Northern treeshrew,
T. belangeri •
Golden-bellied treeshrew,
T. chrysogaster •
Bangka Island treeshrew,
T. discolor •
Striped treeshrew,
T. dorsalis •
Mindanao treeshrew,
T. everetti •
Sumatran treeshrew,
T. ferruginea •
Common treeshrew,
T. glis •
Slender treeshrew,
T. gracilis •
Javan treeshrew,
T. hypochrysa •
Horsfield's treeshrew,
T. javanica •
Long-footed treeshrew,
T. longipes •
Pygmy treeshrew,
T. minor •
Mountain treeshrew,
T. montana •
Nicobar treeshrew,
T. nicobarica •
Palawan treeshrew,
T. palawanensis •
Painted treeshrew,
T. picta •
Kalimantan treeshrew,
T. salatana •
Ruddy treeshrew,
T. splendidula •
Large treeshrew,
T. tana ;Family
Ptilocercidae: • Genus
Ptilocercus •
Pen-tailed treeshrew,
P. lowii The Madras treeshrew (Anathana ellioti) by Davidraju img7.jpg|upright=0.8|
Madras treeshrew (
Anathana ellioti) The northern smooth-tailed treeshrew.jpg|upright=0.8|
Northern smooth-tailed treeshrew (
Dendrogale murina) Tupaia belangeri.JPG|upright=0.8|
Northern treeshrew (
Tupaia belangeri) Stavenn Tupaia glis 00.jpg|upright=0.8|
Common treeshrew (
T. glis) Tupaia javanica.jpg|upright=0.8|
Horsfield's treeshrew (
T. javanica) Tupaia minor.jpg|upright=0.8|
Pygmy treeshrew (
T. minor) == Fossil record ==