primate origins
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Author(s):  
Rosemary Bettle ◽  
Alexandra G. Rosati

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keegan R Selig ◽  
Eric J Sargis ◽  
Mary T Silcox

Abstract The ecology, and particularly the diet, of treeshrews (order Scandentia) is poorly understood compared to that of their close relatives, the primates. This stems partially from treeshrews having fast food transit times through the gut, meaning fecal and stomach samples only represent a small portion of the foodstuffs consumed in a given day. Moreover, treeshrews are difficult to observe in the wild, leading to a lack of observational data in the literature. Although treeshrews are mixed feeders, consuming both insects and fruit, it is currently unknown how the relative importance of these food types varies across Scandentia. Previous study of functional dental morphology has provided an alternative means for understanding the diet of living euarchontans. We used dental topographic metrics to quantify aspects of functional dental morphology in a large sample of treeshrews (n = 58). We measured relief index, Dirichlet normal energy, and three-dimensional orientation patch count rotated, which quantify crown relief, occlusal curvature, and complexity, respectively. Our results suggest that treeshrews exhibit dental morphology consistent with high levels of insectivory relative to other euarchontans. They also suggest that taxa such as Dendrogale melanura and Tupaia belangeri appear to be best suited to insectivory, whereas taxa such as T. palawanensis and T. gracilis appear to be best adapted to frugivory. Our results suggest that Ptilocercus lowii is characterized by a dentition better adapted to insectivory than the early primate Purgatorius. If P. lowii represents a good modern analogue for primitive euarchontans, this contrast would support models of primate origins that include a shift to greater frugivory.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel S. Yapuncich ◽  
Henry J. Feng ◽  
Rachel H. Dunn ◽  
Erik R. Seiffert ◽  
Doug M. Boyer

Author(s):  
Russell L. Ciochan
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 202-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Doug M. Boyer ◽  
Séverine Toussaint ◽  
Marc Godinot
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary T. Silcox ◽  
Sergi López-Torres
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 170329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen G. B. Chester ◽  
Thomas E. Williamson ◽  
Jonathan I. Bloch ◽  
Mary T. Silcox ◽  
Eric J. Sargis

Palaechthonid plesiadapiforms from the Palaeocene of western North America have long been recognized as among the oldest and most primitive euarchontan mammals, a group that includes extant primates, colugos and treeshrews. Despite their relatively sparse fossil record, palaechthonids have played an important role in discussions surrounding adaptive scenarios for primate origins for nearly a half-century. Likewise, palaechthonids have been considered important for understanding relationships among plesiadapiforms, with members of the group proposed as plausible ancestors of Paromomyidae and Microsyopidae. Here, we describe a dentally associated partial skeleton of Torrejonia wilsoni from the early Palaeocene (approx. 62 Ma) of New Mexico, which is the oldest known plesiadapiform skeleton and the first postcranial elements recovered for a palaechthonid. Results from a cladistic analysis that includes new data from this skeleton suggest that palaechthonids are a paraphyletic group of stem primates, and that T. wilsoni is most closely related to paromomyids. New evidence from the appendicular skeleton of T. wilsoni fails to support an influential hypothesis based on inferences from craniodental morphology that palaechthonids were terrestrial. Instead, the postcranium of T. wilsoni indicates that it was similar to that of all other plesiadapiforms for which skeletons have been recovered in having distinct specializations consistent with arboreality.


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