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Chapter 5: Primates.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 5: Primates."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 5: Primates

2 Primate Video

3 Primate Characteristics
After the video; what are primate Characteristics: _________________

4 Characteristics of Primates: Hands & Feet
Five digits on hands/feet Opposable thumb: gripping Partially opposable big toe Nails on all or some digits Fingerprints: For gripping (not identifying)

5 Characteristics of Primates
Shortened snout Clavicle bone Primates have great vision. stereo vision Macula: Spot in back of eye Blocks the sun.

6 Macular Degeneration

7 Vision All primates rely heavily on vision
Color vision in Diurnal primates. Point to Ponder: Why would this be an adaptive trait? (hint: think environment)_______________________________________

8 Stereoscopic vision Stereoscopic vision
Eyes in front of skull, overlapping fields of vision Accurate 3-D vision Increased depth perception Why?________________________________________

9 I. Limbs & Locomotion Tendency towards erect posture
But, primates utilize a number of types of locomotion Bipedal: Walking Brachiation: Swinging Knuckle walkers Fist walkers Limb jumpers

10 Question to Ponder Why are Human Feet different? _______________________________________

11 II. Diet & Teeth Lack of dietary specialization – most primates are generalized feeders eating a wide variety of foods Therefore, primates have a generalized dentition

12 Four types of teeth: generalized for an omnivorous diet.

13 Diet & Teeth 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)

14 III. Senses & Brain Vision enhanced Olfaction reduced Complex brain

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18 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

19 Ultimate mom video

20 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.

21 Tool use

22 SURVEY OF LIVING PRIMATES

23 Three types of primates
Prosimians (pre-monkeys) Monkeys (Old World and New World) Apeshttp://anthro.palomar.edu/primate/table_primates.htm

24 Geographical Distribution

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26 Two Suborders Prosimii Anthropoidea Lemurs, Lorises, Tarsiers
Monkeys, Apes, Humans

27 Lemur and Loris Most primitive
Greater reliance on olfaction (long snouts) Mark territory with scent More laterally placed eyes Shorter gestation & maturation Lemur and Loris

28 Lemurs Madagascar Many different species (diversified in absence of competing primates) Became extinct in other areas

29 Lemurs : Over 100 species 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 Live in large social groups

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31 Lorises Similar in appearance to Lemurs
Tropical habitats (Sri Lanka, India, SE Asia, Africa) Survived by adopting nocturnal habits Competition avoidance with monkeys

32 Lorises Slow, cautious climbing form of quadrupedalism
Bushbabies active vertical climbers and leapers Almost entirely insectivorous Supplemented with fruit, gum, leaves

33 Tarsiers Nocturnal SE Asia Mated pair
Diet: insects & small vertebrates they catch by leaping from branches

34 Anthropoids (monkeys, apes, H.s)
Generally larger body Larger brains in absolute and relative size Increased reliance on vision Fully forward placed eyes; greater degree of color vision less specialized dentition longer gestation; longer maturation; increased parental care More social interaction

35 Monkeys ~ 70 % of all primates are monkeys Two types: Old World
New World

36 New World Monkeys Almost exclusively arboreal New World monkeys are the only monkeys with prehensile tails Diurnal Two Groups: Callitrichidae Cebidae

37 Callitrichids: Marmosets and Tamarins

38 Tamarins: Endangered

39 Marmosets and Tamarins
Most primitive monkeys Retain claws instead of nails Twins rather than single births Family groups Mated pair 2 males & 1 female Males very much involved in infant care

40 Cebids: New World Monkeys
Larger than callitrichids 30 species Diet varies with combo of fruits & leaves Flat noses

41 Cebids: New World Monkeys
Some examples are Squirrel, capuchin, howler and spider monkeys    

42 Old World Monkeys: Cercopithecines and Colobines

43 Cercopithecines: Baboons and Macaques
More generalized than Colobines (eat leaves) More omnivourous Cheek pouches to store food while foraging Most found in Africa Except the Japanese macaques

44 Colobines Leaf diet: Have a sacculated stomach
Colobus monkey exclusive to Africa Langurs found in Asia Probiscus in Borneo

45 Hominoids (apes & humans)
Super-family includes: Less apes: gibbons and siamangs Great apes: gorillas, orangutans, chimps Humans (family Hominidae)

46 Hominoids: Our human ancestors

47 Gibbons & Siamangs Tropical SE Asia Extremely long arm limbs
Curved fingers Reduced thumbs Powerful shoulder muscles

48 Gibbons & Siamangs Monogamous pairs
Lack of sexual dimorphism: (m/f look different) Males share equally in child care Mated pairs are very territorial

49 Orangutans Borneo & Sumatra Almost completely arboreal
Solitary animals Mainly frugivorous Very large (males = 200 lbs, females = 100 lbs)

50 Gorillas Mountain gorillas : 620 left in the wild and none in zoos.
Largest of living primate Knuckle walkers Exclusively vegetarianism Marked sexual dimorphism Males = 400 lbs, females 200 lbs. Family group: Silverback male & harem 2 species (Western and Eastern Gorillas) 4 subspecies ex. Mountain , Western Lowland, Eastern River, Mountain gorillas : 620 left in the wild and none in zoos.

51 Mountain Gorilla

52 Chimps Equatorial Africa 2 species ( 5 groups ) Also knuckle walkers
Large social groups with no single, dominant male Sexually dimorphic, but not as pronounced as gorillas and organutans. Omnivirous (even will kill for meat)

53 Bonobos Bonobos are another species of chimps
More arboreal, more peaceful Humans and chimps can have 95% similar DNA depending on which nucleotides are counted and which are excluded: That’s still big, 5 million base pair difference!!!!!

54 Quiz


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