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Delve into the world of primates, from their categorization as placental mammals to their diverse traits and evolutionary adaptations. Discover the nuances of primate limbs, locomotion, diet, senses, brain complexity, maturation, and social behaviors. Explore hypotheses like Arboreal Adaptation and Visual Predation in primate evolution. Dive into the geographical distribution of primates and their omnivorous diets. Understand the significance of teeth patterns and locomotion styles in different primate species. Uncover taxonomic classifications and the evolutionary relationships between primates.
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What is a Primate? • First, primates are members of the vertebrate class: Mammalia • + 4000 mammals • Primates are part of the subgroup of placental mammals
Three types of primates • Prosimians (pre-monkeys) • Monkeys (Old World and New World) • Apes
Common Mammal Traits • Fur (or body hair in Humans) • Long gestation & live birth (relative to other types of organisms) • Heterodontism (different kinds of specialized teeth) • Ability to maintain constant body temp (Homeothermy) • Increased brain size (greater ability for learning and behavioral flexibility)
Characteristics of Primates • Difficult to define by one or two common traits • Primates are generalized (rather than specialized) mammals. • Defined by evolutionary trends • Not all traits found in every member of the order.
I. Limbs & Locomotion • Tendency towards erect posture • But, primates utilize a number of types of locomotion • Bipedal • Brachiation • Knuckle walkers • Fist walkers • Limb jumpers, etc.
Hands & Feet • Great degree of Prehensility • Five digits on hands/feet (contra horses) • Opposable thumb • In most- divergent & partially opposable big toe • Nails on all or some digits • Highly sensitive tactile pads on digit ends
Question to Ponder • Why are Human Feet different?
II. Diet & Teeth • Lack of dietary specialization – most primates are generalized feeders eating a wide variety of foods • Therefore, primates have a generalized dentition
III. Senses & Brain • Vision enhanced • Olfaction reduced • Complex brain
Vision • All primates rely heavily on vision • Color vision in Diurnal primates. • Stereoscopic vision • Eyes in front of skull, overlapping fields of vision • Accurate 3-D vision • Increased depth perception • Point to Ponder: Why would this be an adaptive trait? (hint: think environment)
IV. Maturation and Learning • As placental mammals, primates have relatively long gestation periods • Also have few offspring, delayed maturation, longer lifespan than other mammals • Greater dependence on learned behavior
V. Behaviors • Tend to be diurnal • Increased flexibility in behavior • Tend to live in social groups • In many primate social groups, males are permanent members – unusual among mammals.
Arboreal Adaptation Hypothesis • Traditionally, the arboreal adaptation seen as the primary factor in primate evolution • Selected for 3-D and color vision (why?). • Grasping prehensile hands/feet to grasp • Tropical arboreal environment = varied foods
Visual Predation hypothesis • Alternative to the AA hypothesis • Primates may have first evolved in bushy forest undergrowth relying on insect diet • Grasping hands & vision for grabbing insects. • Tree jumping came later a means of locomotion that grasping hands allowed.
How to choose which hypothesis is correct? • Not necessarily mutually exclusive • Many primate features may have been developed in non-arboreal settings • Regardless, primates are primarily tree dwellers and whatever traits their ancestors had “preadapted” them for arboreal existences.
Most primates are arboreal, living in forest or woodland areas • Some Old World primates do spend considerable time on land. • No primate, except for humans, is fully terrestrial – all spend some time in trees.
Point to Ponder? • What’s so great about trees?
Diet & Teeth • Omnivorous w/generalized dentition • Although some primates prefer some food items over others, most eat a combo of fruit, leaves, and insects. • Some do eat meat (chimps & baboons) • Some are leaf specialists (Colobine monkey)
Teeth • Most have 4 types of teeth • Incisors and canines: biting and cutting • Premolars and molars: crushing and grinding
Locomotion • Almost all primates are quadrapedal • Many use more than one form of locomotion • Long, flexible lumbar spine which provides greater propulsion from hind legs
Types of Locomotion • Vertical clinging & leaping (prosimians) • Brachiation (apes) • Semi-brachiation (combo leaping/brachiating) • Quadrapedalism • Bipedalism (us)
Taxonomies organized from general to more specific • All primates grouped in the Order of Primates
Two Suborders • Prosimii • Lemurs, Lorises, Tarsiers • Anthropoidea • Monkeys, Apes, Humans
Purposes of Taxonomic classification • To show evolutionary relationship • Animals grouped together or close by more closely related • Organize Diversity • Make sense of differences & similarities
But, system is not necessarily perfect • Studies of Orang chromosomes show it much different from African apes (and these are closer to Humans than Orangs). • Humans & Chimps most closely related (based on DNA studies) • Some researchers use a different scheme to show closeness of Chimp/Human
Prosimians: Lemurs & Lorises • Most primitive • Greater reliance on olfaction (long snouts) • Mark territory with scent • More laterally placed eyes • Shorter gestation & maturation • “dental comb” (projecting lower incisors & canines)
Lemurs • Madagascar • Many different species (diversified in absence of competing primates) • Became extinct in other areas
Lemurs • Range in size from 5”, 2 oz. to +2’, 22 lbs • Larger lemurs are diurnal, omnivorous • Smaller lemurs are nocturnal, insectivores • Many forms are arboreal, others are more terrestrial • Some live in large social groups • Others (Indri) are monogamous pairs
Lorises • Similar in appearance to Lemurs • Tropical habitats (Sri Lanka, India, SE Asia, Africa) • Survived by adopting nocturnal habits • Competition avoidance with monkeys
Lorises • Slow, cautious climbing form of quadrupedalism • Bushbabies active vertical climbers and leapers • Almost entirely insectivorous • Diet supplemented with fruit, gum, leaves
L & L • Vision is stereoscopic, but less developed than anthropoids • Color vision in diurnal, but not nocturnal • Grooming claw on second toe (not fully nailed) • Longer life spans than similarly sized mammals
Tarsiers • Nocturnal • SE Asia • Mated pair & offspring • Diet: insects & small vertebrates they catch by leaping from branches
Tarsiers difficult to classify • Prosimian traits: • Small size • Grooming claws • Unfused mandible • Anthropoid traits • Lack of Rhinarium (moist nose pad) • Orbits fully enclosed by bone
Anthropoids (monkeys, apes, H.s) • Generally larger body • Larger brains in absolute and relative size • Increased reliance on vision • Fully forward placed eyes; bony plate back of eye socket; greater degree of color vision • Fused mandibles; less specialized dentition • Female anatomy different; longer gestation; longer maturation; increased parental care • More social interaction
Monkeys • ~ 70 % of all primates are monkeys • Two types: • Old World or Catarrhini (downward-facing nose) • New World • Callitrichidae • Cebidae
New World Monkeys • Wide flaring noses with nostrils that face outward • Almost exclusively arboreal • Prehensile tails • With one exception, diurnal • Two Groups: • Callitrichidae • Cebidae
Callitrichids • Small Marmosets and Tamarins
Marmosets and Tamarins • Most primitive monkeys • Retain claws instead of nails (used like squirrels to climb trees) • Twins rather than single births • Family groups • Mated pair • 2 males & 1 female • Males very much involved in infant care
Cebids • Larger than callitrichids • 30 species • Diet varies with combo of fruits & leaves • Most are quadrupedals • Spider monkeys are semibrachiators