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Chapter 5: Primates
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Primate Video
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Primate Characteristics
After the video; what are primate Characteristics: _________________
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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)
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Characteristics of Primates
Shortened snout Clavicle bone Primates have great vision. stereo vision Macula: Spot in back of eye Blocks the sun.
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Macular Degeneration
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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)_______________________________________
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Stereoscopic vision Stereoscopic vision
Eyes in front of skull, overlapping fields of vision Accurate 3-D vision Increased depth perception Why?________________________________________
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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
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Question to Ponder Why are Human Feet different? _______________________________________
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II. Diet & Teeth Lack of dietary specialization – most primates are generalized feeders eating a wide variety of foods Therefore, primates have a generalized dentition
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Four types of teeth: generalized for an omnivorous diet.
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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)
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III. Senses & Brain Vision enhanced Olfaction reduced Complex brain
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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
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Ultimate mom video
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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.
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Tool use
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SURVEY OF LIVING PRIMATES
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Three types of primates
Prosimians (pre-monkeys) Monkeys (Old World and New World) Apeshttp://anthro.palomar.edu/primate/table_primates.htm
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Geographical Distribution
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Two Suborders Prosimii Anthropoidea Lemurs, Lorises, Tarsiers
Monkeys, Apes, Humans
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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
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Lemurs Madagascar Many different species (diversified in absence of competing primates) Became extinct in other areas
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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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Lorises Similar in appearance to Lemurs
Tropical habitats (Sri Lanka, India, SE Asia, Africa) Survived by adopting nocturnal habits Competition avoidance with monkeys
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Lorises Slow, cautious climbing form of quadrupedalism
Bushbabies active vertical climbers and leapers Almost entirely insectivorous Supplemented with fruit, gum, leaves
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Tarsiers Nocturnal SE Asia Mated pair
Diet: insects & small vertebrates they catch by leaping from branches
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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
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Monkeys ~ 70 % of all primates are monkeys Two types: Old World
New World
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New World Monkeys Almost exclusively arboreal New World monkeys are the only monkeys with prehensile tails Diurnal Two Groups: Callitrichidae Cebidae
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Callitrichids: Marmosets and Tamarins
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Tamarins: Endangered
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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
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Cebids: New World Monkeys
Larger than callitrichids 30 species Diet varies with combo of fruits & leaves Flat noses
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Cebids: New World Monkeys
Some examples are Squirrel, capuchin, howler and spider monkeys
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Old World Monkeys: Cercopithecines and Colobines
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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
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Colobines Leaf diet: Have a sacculated stomach
Colobus monkey exclusive to Africa Langurs found in Asia Probiscus in Borneo
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Hominoids (apes & humans)
Super-family includes: Less apes: gibbons and siamangs Great apes: gorillas, orangutans, chimps Humans (family Hominidae)
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Hominoids: Our human ancestors
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Gibbons & Siamangs Tropical SE Asia Extremely long arm limbs
Curved fingers Reduced thumbs Powerful shoulder muscles
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Gibbons & Siamangs Monogamous pairs
Lack of sexual dimorphism: (m/f look different) Males share equally in child care Mated pairs are very territorial
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Orangutans Borneo & Sumatra Almost completely arboreal
Solitary animals Mainly frugivorous Very large (males = 200 lbs, females = 100 lbs)
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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.
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Mountain Gorilla
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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)
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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!!!!!
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Quiz
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