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Published byNathan Harrington Modified over 8 years ago
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What does it mean to be biologically human? Why are we such strange apes? January 24, 2005
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Taxonomy “Carl” Linnaeus Classification system Hierarchical Binomial –Genus –species
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Human Taxonomy KingdomAnimaliaAnimal PhylumChordataChordates SubphylumVertebrata Vertebrates ClassMammaliaMammals InfraclassEutheriaEutherians OrderPrimatesPrimates SuborderAnthropoideaAnthropoids InfraorderCatarrhiniCatarrhines SuperfamilyHominoideaHominoids FamilyHominidaeHominids GenusHomoHumans SpeciesHomo sapiens SubspeciesHomo sapiens sapiens
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Why look at primates? Homologies: –Genetics –Brain Structure –Biochemistry –General physiology
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Why look at primates? Analogies: similar traits that arise if species experience similar selective forces and adapt to them in similar ways. –Feeding ecologies of terrestrial primates
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Major Primate Characteristics Grasping Tactile Hands Vision (stereoscopic) Brain Complexity Parental Investment Sociality
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What do non-human primates look like? Prosimians –Lemurs –Tarsiers –Bushbabies –Loris –Aye Aye
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What do non-human primates look like? New World Monkeys –Spider Monkey –Squirrel Monkey –Capuchin Monkey –Marmoset –Howler Monkey
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What do non-human primates look like? New World Monkeys have prehensile tails.
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What do non-human primates look like? Old World Monkeys –Baboons –Macaque –Langurs –Proboscis –Drills, Mandrills
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What do non-human primates look like? “Lesser” Apes –Gibbons
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What do non-human primates look like? “Great” Apes –OrangutanOrangutan –GorillaGorilla –ChimpanzeeChimpanzee –BonoboBonobo –Humans
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Primates in Macroevolutionary Context Misconceptions: –Evolution is not teleological! –Diversity does not represent stages –All animals are equally “modern” –Evolution does not necessarily lead to smarter, stronger, or morally superior animals.
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Phylogeny Evolutionary relationships among species (“family tree”)
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Ancestral Traits Homologies between species.
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Derived Traits Compared to non-human primates, humans have: –Less fur –More technology –Bipedal Locomotion
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What do non-human primates teach us? Insights into fossil primates –Activity Patters (nocturnal, diurnal) –Locomotion Quadrapeds, Knucklewalkers, Brachiators, Bipeds –Diet/Feeding Ecology Insectivores, frugivores, folivores, carnivores, omnivores
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What do non-human primates teach us? Feeding Ecology Sexual Dimorphism Mating Strategies All Related
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What Females “Want” Offspring to survive Reliable food supply Help raising offspring
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What Males “Want” Sex (pass on genes=maximize fitness) Avoid helping raise offspring when it interferes with further mating
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Feeding Ecology and Mating Females map onto food resources Males map onto females
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Gibbons Food Clumps Easy for females to defend food Easy for males to defend females Result: Monogamy
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Orangutan Food dispersed and highly seasonal Females can’t defend resources (nomadic) Males can’t defend females Solitary, nomadic mating
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Gorillas Large, dense food patches Multiple females form a territorial group One male can protect the group One male polygyny
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Chimpanzees Food is densely distributed and plentiful No need for territoriality for females or males Multi-male polygyny
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Sexual Dimorphism Differences in body size between males and females Highest when there is high competition between males for mates In humans, suggests that sometime in pre-history humans were polygynous
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Sexual Dimorphism Monogamy: No Dimorphism Multi-male polygyny: mild Solitary mating: medium Single male polygyny: extreme
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