Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Sounds and language
3
Brain size
4
c. 60 mya Modern primates
5
Prosimians Primitive Southeast Asia, Africa, Indonesia, Madagascar Snout with moist, fleshy nose-pad Madagascan radiation: formerly 44 species of lemurs. Size range. Humans arrived c. 2,000 ybp Therefore, many species exterminated
6
Specialized features Aye-aye Madagascar
7
Lemurs Madagascar Lemurs: e.g., Ring-tailed--mostly terrestrial e.g., Sifakas--arboreal
8
Lorises Gabon, Central Africa Different niches
9
Tarsier SE Asia
12
Arboreal Some with prehensile tails New World monkeys
14
Almost exclusively arboreal Most quadrupedal Left: 7 species different niches
16
Old World monkeys Tails not prehensile Most arboreal and quadrupedal Colobus monkey
17
Exception: baboons: mainly terrestrial
19
Orangutan Indonesian Islands: Java & Borneo On an evolutionary branch separated from other great apes and humans Pronounced sexual dimorphism males: 200+ lbs females: 100 lbs Slow, cautious climbers “four-handed” Almost exclusively arboreal Largely solitary
20
♂ ♀ Pronounced sexual dimorphism
21
Orangutan (juvenile) Quadrupedal Bears weight on sides of hands and feet
22
Gorillas Largest living primates On an evolutionary branch separated from humans, chimpanzees, and bonobos Western and eastern equatorial Africa Pronounced sexual dimorphism –males: 400 lbs. –females: 150-200 lbs. Primarily terrestrial
23
2 Species:Western (Lowland gorillas) and Eastern (Mountain gorillas)
24
Young gorilla Quadrupedal knuckle walking
25
Chimpanzees: most closely related to bonobos (same genus: Pan) Moderate sexual dimorphism: males: 100+ lbs; females: 80 lbs Some populations use tools; may engage in group hunting for meat
26
Chimpanzee Bonobo Not a “pygmy chimpanzee” Separate species
27
Bonobo Democratic Republic of the Congo Has attracted attention because of a full repertoire of sexual activities used extensively in its social interactions More linear body than chimpanzees Longer legs relative to arms Relatively smaller head Brief bouts of bipedalism: mostly knuckle walkers
28
Threatened species Bonobo future? Rocky Mountain News: March 6, 2006 1984: Est. 100,000 2005: Est. 5,000 Why the drop in density? Killed and sold (ca. $200/bonobo) Prized as food. Sold to local markets and urban restaurants
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.