Primate
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
- For the ecclesiastical use of this term, see primate (religion)
| Primates | Olive Baboon |
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| Families | ||||||||
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Cheirogaleidae Lemuridae Megaladapidae Indridae Daubentoniidae Loridae Galagonidae Tarsiidae Cebidae Atelidae Cercopithecidae Hylobatidae Hominidae | ||||||||
All primates have five fingers (pentadactyly), a generalized dental pattern, and a primitive (unspecialized) body plan. Another distinguishing feature of primates is fingernails. Opposing thumbs are also a characteristic primate feature, but are not limited to this order; opossums, for example, also have opposing thumbs. In primates, the combination of opposing thumbs, short fingernails (rather than claws) and long, inward-closing fingers is a relic of the ancestral practice of brachiating through trees. Forward-facing color binocular vision was also useful for the brachiating ancestors of humans, particularly for finding and collecting food. All primates, even those that lack the features typical of other primates (like lorises), share eye orbit characteristics that distinguish them from other taxonomic orders.
As the table below illustrates, in many primate species, the males are larger than the females. All but one of these are Old World species, and sexual dimorphism is much less in the marmosets (New World) than in the other species listed. New World monkeys are typically much less sexually dimorphic than the Old World monkeys and apes. Correspondingly, they frequently form pair bonds, whereas many Old World species are polygynous.
| Species | Female | Male |
|---|---|---|
| Gorilla | 105 kg (231 lb) | 205 kg (452 lb) |
| Human | 62.5 kg (137.5 lb) | 78.4 kg (172 lb) |
| Patas Monkey | 5.5 kg (12 lb) | 10 kg (22 lb) |
| Proboscis Monkey | 9 kg (20 lb) | 19 kg (42 lb) |
| Pygmy Marmoset | 120 g (4.2 oz) | 140 g (5 oz) |
Classification
In older classifications, the Primates were divided into two superfamilies: Prosimii and Anthropoidea. The Prosimii included all of the prosimians: lemurs, lorises, the aye-aye, tarsiers, etc. The Anthropoidea contained all of the simians.
In more modern, cladistic reckonings, the Primate order is a true clade and can be further divided into three main clades. The most primitive clade is the suborder Strepsirhini, which contains all of the extant prosimians except for the tarsiers. The seven strepsirhine families are the four related lemur families and the three remaining families that include the lorises, the Aye-aye, the galagos, and the pottos. Some classification schemes wrap the Megaladapidae into the Lemuridae and the Galagonidae into the Loridae, yielding a three-two family split instead of the four-three split as presented here.
The suborder Haplorhini is composed of the remaining two sister clades: the tarsiers in family Tarsiidae (monotypic in its own superfamily) and the two superfamilies of New and Old World monkeys, including humans and the other apes.
The Tree shrews have sometimes been classified as primates, but are now usually placed in their own order, Scandentia.
- ORDER PRIMATES
- Suborder Strepsirhini: non-tarsier prosimians
- Family Cheirogaleidae: dwarf and mouse lemurs
- Family Lemuridae: lemurs
- Family Megaladapidae: sportive lemurs
- Family Indridae: wooly lemurs and allies
- Family Daubentoniidae: Aye-aye
- Family Loridae: lorises, pottos and allies
- Family Galagonidae: galagos
- Suborder Haplorhini: tarsiers, monkeys and apes
- Family Tarsiidae: tarsiers
- Superfamily Platyrrhini: New World monkeys
- Superfamily Catarrhini
- Family Cercopithecidae: Old World monkeys
- Family Hylobatidae: gibbons
- Family Hominidae: great apes, including humans
- Suborder Strepsirhini: non-tarsier prosimians
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