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Kaca anyar: {{Taxobox | color = pink | name = Tando | image = Kaguang-drawing.jpg | image_width = 250px | image_caption = Gambar tando | regnum = Animalia | phylum = Chordata | classis ...
 
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Baris ka-51:
*** ''[[Galeopterus]]''
**** [[Tando Sunda]], ''Galeopterus variegatus''
*** ''[[Dermotherium]]'' (musnah)
**** ''[[Dermotherium major]]'' (musnah)
**** ''[[Dermotherium chimaera]]'' (musnah)
 
Di masing-masing habitatna, spésiés tando téh kaancam musnah alatan [[karuksakan habitat]], nu di Pilipina ku [[IUCN]] digolongkeun ''vulnerable''. Lian ti alatan karuksakan habitat, sacara alami tando ogé mémang mangsa [[heulang Pilipina]], katambah ku sok diboro ku manusa pikeun diala dagingna.
 
Najan kaasup mamalia [[plaséntal]], paripolah kawinna mah ampir sarua jeung [[marsupial]]. Sanggeus dikandung 60 poé, anakna borojol dina kaayaan anu can mekar jeung leutik kénéh pisan, sarta salila genep bulan terus ngagantél dina beuteung indungna. Umurna nincak sawawa sanggeus 2-3 taun.
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The [[Mixodectidae]] appear to be fossil Dermoptera. However although other [[Paleogene]] mammals have been interpreted as related to Dermopterans, the evidence for this is uncertain and many of them are no longer interpreted as being gliding mammals. At present, the fossil record of definitive dermopterans is limited to two species of the [[Eocene]] and [[Oligocene]] cynocephalid genus ''[[Dermotherium]]''.<ref name=Marivauxetal06>{{cite journal | author = Marivaux, L., L. Bocat, Y. Chaimanee, J.-J. Jaeger, B. Marandat, P. Srisuk, P. Tafforeau, C. Yamee, and J.-L. Welcomme | year = 2006 | title = Cynocephalid dermopterans from the Palaeogene of South Asia (Thailand, Myanmar and Pakistan): systematic, evolutionary and palaeobiogeographic implications | journal = Zoologica Scripta | volume = 35 | issue = 4 | pages = 395-420}}</ref>
 
Although they are [[placental]] mammals, colugos are almost [[marsupial]]-like in their breeding habits. The young are born after just 60 days of gestation in a tiny and undeveloped form, and spend their first six months or so of life clinging to the mother's belly. To protect them and transport them she curls her tail up to fold the gliding membrane into a warm, secure quasi-pouch. Breeding is fairly slow as the young do not reach full size until they are two or three years old.
 
Recent [[molecular phylogeny|molecular phylogenetic]] studies have demonstrated that colugos belong to the [[clade]] [[Euarchonta]] along with the [[treeshrew]]s (order [[Scandentia]]) and the [[primates]]. In this taxonomy, the [[Euarchonta]] are sister to the [[Glires]] ([[Lagomorpha|lagomorphs]] and [[rodent]]s), and the two groups are combined into the [[clade]] [[Euarchontoglires]].