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Blackburn, D.G. (1993).
Lactation: historical patterns and potential for manipulation. Journal of Dairy Science 76: 3195-3212.
Abstract: The advent of biotechnology has made
data on undomesticated mammals relevant to dairy science. Such data indicate the potential of
lactation for modification, reveal genetic material available for use through
bioengineering, help distinguish adaptive features from historical artifacts,
and clarify limits on lactational diversity that date from early
evolution. Evolutionary analysis
indicates that a complex degree of lactation preceded divergence of the extant
mammalian lineages during the Mesozoic Era.
Although aspects of monotreme lactation appear to be ancestral for
extant mammals, marsupials and eutherians exhibit divergent
specializations. Evidence is consistent
with the idea that proto-lacteal glands evolved by combining features of skin
gland populations into a new functional complex. Secretions of these ancestral glands may have had antimicrobial
properties that protected the eggs or hatchlings and organic components that
supplemented offspring nutrition.
Following development of highly nutritious milks, evolution produced
diversity in milk composition and function, milk output, length of lactation,
mammary gland anatomy, and contributions of lactation to offspring
nutrition. Certain marsupials are
specialized in terms of functional independence and temporal plasticity of
mammary tissues. Mammalian diversity
indicates that artificial selection and physiological manipulation of domestic
artiodactyls have only modestly exploited the potential of mammary glands as a
nutritional source for humans.

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Reprints: daniel.blackburn@mail.trincoll.edu