Lecture 5: Haplorhini, Part 1: Tarsiers and Platyrrhines
Family Cebidae: Subfamily Cebinae
Cebus (Capuchins) Saimiri (squirrel monkeys)
Family Atelidae: Subfamily Atelinae
Four genera: Ateles (Spide monkeys), Lagothrix (woolly monkeys), Brachyteles (woolly spider monkeys or muriquis) Alouatta (howler monkeys)
Subfamily Cebinae: Behavior
Large MM-FF Diurnal Form polyspecific associations No social grooming in Saimiri Cebus uses tools
Behavior of Subfamily Pitheciinae
Little known about behavior Small groups/pairs in Pithecia to large groups in Cacajao and Chiropotes
Infraorder Platyrrhini
Made up of families Cebidae, Atelidae, and Pitheciidae. Its geographic range includes South and Central America.
What is the clade classification of tarsiers based on?
PO closure, Hemochorial placenta, lack of tepetum, orbital convergence, dry nose w/mobile lip, fovea centralis, reduced olfactory bulb, and fused frontal
Derived placental morphology
Strepsirhini (lemur) have a diffuse, epitheliochorial placenta Haplorhini (Tarsiers and Macaque) have a discoidal, haemochorial placenta
What are the key traits of Tarsius?
They have: Mostly closed post-orbital plate. Nocturnal Very large, convergent eyes No tapetum lucidum and fused frontal dry nose mobile ears two grooming claws specialized leg/ankles morphology simple, sharp teeth unfused mandible without toothcomb reduced number of teeth (dental formula is 2133/1133 presence of paraconid faunivorous
Family Atelidae: Subfamily Pitheciinae
Three genera: Pitchecia (Saki monkeys) Chiropotes (bearded saki monkeys) Cacajao (uakaris)
What are the characteristics of primitive uterine morphology?
Anthropoids have a simplex uterus. Prosimians have a bicornate uterus.
What kind of behavior do members of the Atelinae subfamily exhibit?
Ateles and Brachyteles have fission-fusion social system. Lagothrix is MM-FF. Alouatta is mostly small M-FF or MM-FF (sexually dimorphic) All diurnal, arboreal.
What kind of diet do members of the atelinae family have?
Ateles and Lagothrix are frugivorous, alouatta is folivorous and brachyteles is folivorous and frugivorous.
Family Cebidae: Subfamily Aotinae
Diet: Primarily frugivorous, few leaves and insects Behavior: Frequently use scent-marking, onlu nocturnal anthropoid today, pair-living, monogamous with significant paternal care territorial against other pairs
Summary: Tarsiiformes
Difficult to classify due to mix of primitive, derived and unusual traits (homoplastic traits?). Highly specialized leapers that forage solitarily and feed exclusively on animal matter.
What are the key traits of Platyrrhines
Distinctive nose-shape Platyrrhini means flat nose three premolars small/no diastema most have three molars. Dental traits include lacking a hypoconulid on lower molars
Polymorphic Color Vision in Platyrrhines
Gene for seeing blue/green is on an autosomal chromosome.
What is the grade classification of tarsiers based on?
Grooming claws, unfused mandible, mobile ears, multiple pairs of nipples, bicornuate uterus, nocturanal, solitary foragers, small-bodied, infant parking and oral transport of offspring, diet, and leaping adaptations.
What are the key traits of the Haplorhini?
In general, strepsirhines retain more primitive traits and haplorhines exhibit more derived characters. All but tarsiers have a fully closed post-orbital plate. Greater orbital convergence Presence of a fovea centralis No tapetum lucidum Almost entirely diurnal Reduced olfactory system No rhinarium Usually larger bodied Exhibit less leaping Larger relative brain size Almost all have hypocones They are more herbivorous Unable to synthesize vitamin C. Greater sexual dimorphism most live in social groups
Family Callithrichidae: Subfamily Callithrichinae
Includes five genera (clockwise): Callimico (Goeldi's monkeys), Callithrix (marmosets), Saguinus (tamarins), Leontopithecus (Golden-lion tamarins), Cebuella (pygmy marmosets)
Summary: Family Cebidae
Includes: Capuchins, owl monkeys, and squirrel monkeys, some have prehensile tails, includes the nocturnal monkey, some have very large brains with complex behavior, one taxon is monogramous, others MM,, MF groups
Summary: Family Atelidae
Includes: Howler monkeys, spider monkeys, woolly monkeys, and woolly spider monkeys Includes the group with truly prehensile tails Includes the largest of the platyrrhines Exhibit a wide range of social organizations
Summary: Family Cebidae
Includes: Marmosets, tamarins, and Goeldi's monkeys cooperative breeding systems, includes the smallest of all monkeys, some are exudate-specialists, all eat gums, reduced number of molars, have primarily twins (1-2 times a year).
Summary: Family Pitheciidae
Includes: Saki Monkeys, Uakaris, titi monkeys, etc. Includes a group of seed-specialists Titi monkeys have the most primitive morphology Little known, variable social organizations
What are the morphological characteristics of subfamily atelinae?
Largest of NWM, True prehensile tails, semi-brachiators, some lack thumbs, others schizodactylous, some females have a hypertrophied clitoris, alouatta specialized for folivory and loud calling.
Subfamily Callithrchinae
Morphology: Smallest of the New World Monkey 2132 (Callimico 2133) re-evolved claws Diet Marmosets specialize in eating gum and sap Other callithrichines are more fruit/insect eating.
Subfamily Callicebinae Genus Callicebus
Morphology: Monomorphic, tail-twinning, quadrupedal, primitive morphology Diet: Mostly fruit, with leaves and some insects Behavior: Diurnal pait-living, monogamous, territorial, heavy paternal care, strong pair-bond
Subfamily Aotinae: Genus Aotus
Morphopology Large eyes, no tapetum lucidum, variable resistance to malaria, monomorphic and monochromatic.
Subfamily Cebinae: Diet
Most omnivorous NWM Cebus extractive foragers Saimiri more insectivorous
What are some primitive traits that tarsiers have retained?
Multiple sets of nipples
Haplorhini
One of the two suborders that make up the order of primates.
Molecular Estimates of Divergence in Platyrrhines
Platyrrhines diverved about 20-25 mya
What are the differences in cranial traits between platyrrhines and catarrhines?
Platyrrhines have a tympanic ear rink, parietal and zygomatic bones articulate, and cranial sutures fuse late. Catarrhines have a tympanic ear tube, frontal and sphenoid bones articulate, cranial sutures fuse early.
Subfamily Cebinae: Morphology
Semi-prehensile tails, fairly large-brained, quadrupedal, saimiri smaller than cebus, saimiri has interorbital septum
Describe the general female reproductive anatomy common in Haplorhini
Simple uterus Hemochorial placenta
Subfamily Callithrichinae: Behavior
Small family groups monogamous, polygynous, or polyandrous Both sexes disperse Reproductive suppression Paternal and sibling care Chimerism Aggressive toward other groups of their own species Often form polyspecific associations
Platyrrhine characteristics
Some have prehensile tails with tactile pads. Some have claw-like nails. Many show reduced pollex opposability Schizodactyly Highly arboreal polymorphic color vision (Trichromatic, dichromatic, and monochromatic)
What are some morphological differences between Strepsirhines and Haplorhines?
Strepsirhines have an unfused frontal and Haplorhines have a fused frontal. Strepsirhines have an unfused mandible and Haplorhines have a fused mandible.
Why are tarsiers problematic to classify taxonomically?
The Traditional Grade Classification groups tarsiers with lemurs and lorises and calls this group prosimii. Monkeys, Apes, and Humans are placed together to form the anthropoidea group. Clade classification groups lemurs and lorises together under the term strepsirhini. Tarsiers are grouped with Monkeys, Apes, and Humans to form the Haplorhini group.
What are the three infraorders that make up the order of the haplorhini?
The three infraorders are tarsiidormes, platyrrhini, and catarrhini.