You have to be careful—the LCA of those is not the LCA of all mammals, because those all happen to be placental mammals—and the splits leading to marsupial mammals and monotremes came before then.
That’s true. I addressed that originally by saying all monophyletic clades were natural groups, and they have a natural sequence (in order of increasing exclusivity).
So while we can debate which group should be called “mammals”—whether placentals, or placentals+marsupials, or something bigger yet—we can all agree that “mammals” is a group whose border lies somewhere near the placentals-marsupials joining point in the evolutionary sequence. Dolphins are nestled very deeply in the group, and so dolphins are definitely mammals by any definition you may use. (That’s what the original debate was about: I argued that “mammals without dolphins” is not a natural group.)
It’s not a question of fact, but of definition—to what group do we refer as “mammals”? So it makes little sense to argue over it.
All groups of animals defined via shared characteristics have fuzzy borders. The fact that all extant species either clearly do or clearly don’t lactate is purely an evolutionary accident, since all the intermediaries once existed. Even today we have species that lactate but don’t have localized nipples (the platypus exudes milk from a wide area of skin). Farther out, we have various fishes, amphibians, etc. that exude specialized non-milk substances from their skin for their young to eat. If you throw away the categories, “feeding the young on substances released from skin pores” is a wider category than just mammals.
Also, this whole thread started with people saying that “common people” wouldn’t know if dolphins are mammals, even though they do lactate.
You have to be careful—the LCA of those is not the LCA of all mammals, because those all happen to be placental mammals—and the splits leading to marsupial mammals and monotremes came before then.
That’s true. I addressed that originally by saying all monophyletic clades were natural groups, and they have a natural sequence (in order of increasing exclusivity).
So while we can debate which group should be called “mammals”—whether placentals, or placentals+marsupials, or something bigger yet—we can all agree that “mammals” is a group whose border lies somewhere near the placentals-marsupials joining point in the evolutionary sequence. Dolphins are nestled very deeply in the group, and so dolphins are definitely mammals by any definition you may use. (That’s what the original debate was about: I argued that “mammals without dolphins” is not a natural group.)
I don’t think anyone debates whether monotremes and marsupials are mammals.
Both groups produce milk through mammary glands to feed their young—and both groups have long been recognised as being mammals.
It’s not a question of fact, but of definition—to what group do we refer as “mammals”? So it makes little sense to argue over it.
All groups of animals defined via shared characteristics have fuzzy borders. The fact that all extant species either clearly do or clearly don’t lactate is purely an evolutionary accident, since all the intermediaries once existed. Even today we have species that lactate but don’t have localized nipples (the platypus exudes milk from a wide area of skin). Farther out, we have various fishes, amphibians, etc. that exude specialized non-milk substances from their skin for their young to eat. If you throw away the categories, “feeding the young on substances released from skin pores” is a wider category than just mammals.
Also, this whole thread started with people saying that “common people” wouldn’t know if dolphins are mammals, even though they do lactate.