Chapter 5 Overview of Living Primates
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Transcript Chapter 5 Overview of Living Primates
Chapter 6
An Overview of the Primates
Chapter Outline
Characteristics of Primates
Primate Adaptations
Primate Classification
Survey of the Living Primates
Endangered Primates
Primates As Mammals
There are approximately 190 species of
nonhuman primates
Primates belong to:
Vertebrate class - Mammalia
Subgroup of placental mammals.
Characteristics of
Primates
Fur (body hair)
Long gestation followed by live
birth
Homeothermy, the ability to
maintain a constant body
temperature
Increased brain size
Capacity for learning and
behavioral flexibility.
Primate Limbs
A tendency towards erect posture.
Hands and feet possess grasping ability.
Features of the hands and feet:
5 digits on hand and feet
Opposable thumb
partially opposable great toe
Tactile pads enriched with sensory
nerve fibers at the ends of digits
Primate Senses and the
Brain
Color vision is a characteristic of all diurnal
primates, nocturnal primates lack color vision.
Depth perception is made possible by eyes
positioned forward on the front of the face.
Decreased reliance on the sense of smell.
The brain has expanded in size and become
increasingly complex.
Primate Maturation
Longer periods of gestation
Reduced numbers of offspring
Delayed maturation
Extension of the entire life span.
Primate Learning and
Behavior
Have a greater dependence on flexible,
learned behavior.
Tend to live in social groups.
Males are permanent members of many
primate social groups, a situation unusual
among mammals.
Arboreal Hypothesis
Arboreal living was the most important
factor in the evolution of primates.
Prehensile hand is adapted to climbing in
the trees.
A variety of foods led to the omnivorous
diet and generalized dentition.
Visual Predation Hypothesis
Primates may have first adapted to
shrubby forest undergrowth and the
lowest tiers of the forest canopy.
Forward facing eyes enabled primates to
judge distance when grabbing for insects.
Flowering plants may have influenced
primate evolution.
Primate Habitats
Most live in tropical or semitropical areas
of the new and old worlds.
Most are arboreal, living in forest or
woodland habitats.
No nonhuman primate is adapted to a
fully terrestrial environment; all spend
some time in the trees.
Primate Diet and Teeth
Generally omnivorous, reflected in their
generalized dentition.
Most eat a combination of fruits, leaves,
and insects.
Most have four types of teeth: incisors,
canines, premolars and molars.
Primate Locomotion
Most are quadrupedal, using all four limbs
in their locomotion.
Arm swinging is found among the apes.
Prehensile tails, found only among the
new world monkeys, are used as an aid to
locomotion.
Alternative Classifications of
Great Apes and Humans
Revised classification
(more evolutionarily
accurate)
Great apes—separate
family (Pongidae)
Orangutan
Gorilla
Chimpanzee
Bonobo
Humans—separate family
(Hominidae)
Traditional
classification
One family only
(Hominidae), including all
large-bodied apes and
humans; more detailed
distinctions made at lower
taxonomic categories
Prosimians
The most primitive of the
primates.
Characteristics:
Reliance on olfaction
Laterally placed eyes
Shorter gestation and maturation
periods
Dental specialization called the
"dental comb”
Lemurs
Found on the island of Madagascar and other
islands off the coast of Africa.
Extinct elsewhere in the world.
Characteristics:
Larger lemurs are diurnal and eat vegetable
foods: fruit, leaves, buds, and bark.
Smaller lemurs are nocturnal and
insectivorous (insect -feeding).
Lorises
Found in tropical forests and
woodlands of India, Sri Lanka,
southeast Asia, and Africa.
Characteristics:
Use a climbing quadrupedalism.
Some are insectivorous; others
supplement their diet with fruit,
leaves, gums, and slugs.
Females frequently form
associations for foraging or in
sharing the same sleeping nest.
Tarsiers
Small nocturnal primates
found on the islands of
southeast Asia.
Eat insects and small
vertebrates which they catch
by leaping from branches.
Basic social pattern appears
to be a family unit consisting
of a mated pair and their
offspring.
Anthropoids
(Monkeys, Apes and Humans)
Common traits:
Larger brain and body size
Reduced reliance on the sense of smell
Greater degree of color vision
Bony plate at the back of the eye socket
Different female reproductive anatomy
Longer gestation and maturation periods
Fused mandible
Monkeys
Represent about 70% of all primate
species.
Divided into two groups separated by
geography and several million years of
evolutionary history:
New world monkeys
Old world monkeys
New World Monkeys
Almost exclusively arboreal.
Found in southern Mexico and central and
south America.
Two families: Callitrichidae and Cebid
New World Monkeys:
Callitrichidae
Give birth to twins
Live in families composed of
a mated pair or a female and
two adult males, plus the
offspring.
Males are involved with
infant care.
New World Monkeys: Cebid
Possess prehensile tails.
Most live in groups of both sexes and all
ages.
Others live as monogamous pairs with
subadult offspring.
Old World Monkeys
Habitats range from tropical
forests to semiarid desert to
snow-covered areas in Japan
and china.
Characteristics:
Most quadrupedal and
arboreal
All belong to the
Cercopithecidae family.
Divided into subfamilies, the
cercopithecines and the
colobines.
Hominoids
(Apes and Humans)
Characteristics distinguishing hominoids from
monkeys:
Larger body size
Absence of a tail
Shortened trunk
More complex behavior
More complex brain
Increased period of infant development and
dependency
Gibbons and
Siamangs
Found in the tropical areas of southeast Asia.
Adaptations for brachiation may be related to
feeding while hanging from branches.
Diet is largely fruit with leaves, flowers, and
insects.
Basic social unit is a monogamous pair and
their offspring.
Males and females delineate their territories
with whoops and “songs”.
Orangutans (Pogo pygmaeus)
Found in heavily forested areas of Borneo and
Sumatra.
Almost completely arboreal.
males = 200 lbs, females = 100 lbs
Pronounced sexual dimorphism.
Solitary
Principally frugivorous
(feed-eating).
Gorillas (Gorilla Gorilla)
Largest of the living
primates.
Confined to forested regions
of central Africa.
Males can weigh up to 400
pounds, females 200
pounds.
Primarily terrestrial, using a
posture called “knuckle –
walking”.
Groups consist of one large
silverback male, a few adult
females, and their subadult
offspring.
Chimpanzees
(Pan Troglodytes)
Found in equatorial Africa.
Anatomically similar to gorillas
particularly in limb proportions and
upper-body shape.
Locomotion includes knuckle-walking on
the ground and brachiation in the trees.
Eat a variety of plant and animal foods.
Large communities of as many as 50
individuals.
Bonobos (Pan paniscus)
Only found in an area south of the Zaire river.
Population is believed to only number a few
thousand individuals.
Exploit the same foods as chimps, including
occasional small mammals.
Male-female bonds constitute the societal core.
Sexuality includes frequent copulations
throughout the female's estrous cycle.
Humans (Homo Sapiens)
The only living species in the family
Hominidae.
Human teeth are typical primate teeth.
Dependence on vision for orientation to
the world
Humans (Homo Sapiens)
Flexible limbs and grasping hands
Omnivorous diet
Cognitive abilities are the result of
dramatic increases in brain size.
Bipedal
Endangered Primates
Over half of all living primates are
endangered, many face immediate
extinction.
Three reasons:
Habitat destruction
Hunting for food
Live capture for export or local trade
Hunting of
Primates
In West Africa the most
serious problem is
hunting to feed the
growing human
population.
Estimated that
thousands of primates,
are killed and sold for
meat every year.
Primates are also killed
for commercial products.
Bushmeat
Bush meat is not survival food – it is seen as a
luxury food by some – some gorilla parts are
thought to have magical properties
Quick Quiz
1. Which of the following is NOT a primate
characteristic?
a) stereoscopic vision
b) highly developed sense of smell
c) orthograde or upright posture
d) prehensility
Answer: b
A highly developed sense of smell is
NOT a primate characteristic.
2. Binocular vision in primates contributes
to
a) color vision.
b) lateral vision.
c) panoramic vision.
d) stereoscopic vision.
Answer: d
Binocular vision in primates contributes
to stereoscopic vision.
3. Which of the following is NOT true of
tarsiers?
a) They are nocturnal.
b) They are insectivorous.
c) They live in groups of 10-12
individuals.
d) They can rotate their heads almost
180 degrees.
Answer: c
Tarsiers do not live in groups of 10-12
individuals.
4. The _________________ is the
largest living primate.
Answer: gorilla
The gorilla is the largest living primate.
5. Which of the following is NOT a reason
that nonhuman primates are
endangered?
a) habitat destruction for logging, mining,
and agricultural land
b) hunting for food
c) live capture for either the exotic pet
trade or biomedical research
d) establishment of biological reserves
Answer: d
The establishment of biological
reserves is NOT a reason that nonhuman
primates are endangered.