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5.4: End of Chapter Review

  • Page ID
    158747
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    Test Your Knowledge
    1. Why does the field of anthropology, a field dedicated to the study of humans, include the study of non-human animals? What important things can we learn from non-human primates in anthropology?
    2. One of the important goals of an introductory biological anthropology course is to teach you about your place in nature. What is the full taxonomic classification of humans, and what are some of the traits we have of each of these categories?
    3. When you have seen primates in person, did you observe any facial expressions, behaviors, or physical traits that seemed familiar to you? If so, which ones and why?
    4. Why is it important to try to place taxa into a clade classification rather than groupings based on grade? Can you think of an example?
    5. Draw out a tree showing the major taxonomic group of primates described here, making sure to leave room in between each level. Underneath each taxon, list some of the key features of this group so that you can compare traits between groups.

    GLOSSARY

    Activity pattern: Refers to the time of day an animal is typically active.

    African clade: A grouping that includes gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, humans, and their extinct relatives.

    Analogy: When two or more taxa exhibit similar traits that have evolved independently, similar traits evolve due to similar selective pressures. (Also sometimes called convergent evolution, parallel evolution, or homoplasy.)

    Arboreal: A descriptor for an organism that spends most of its time in trees.

    Asian clade: A grouping that includes orangutans and their extinct relatives.

    Bilophodont: Molar pattern of cercopithecoid monkeys in which there are usually four cusps that are arranged in a square pattern and connected by two ridges.

    Bipedalism: Walking on two legs.

    Brachiation: A form of locomotion in which the organism swings below branches using the forelimbs.

    Bunodont: Low, rounded cusps on the cheek teeth.

    Canines: In most primates, these are the longest of the teeth, often conical in shape and used as a weapon against predators or others of their species.

    Cathemeral: Active throughout the 24-hour period.

    Clade: A grouping based on ancestral relationships; a branch of the evolutionary tree.

    Cusps: The bumps on the chewing surface of the premolars and molars, which can be quite sharp in some species.

    Dental formula: The number of each type of tooth in one quadrant of the mouth, written as number of incisors: canines: premolars: molars.

    Derived trait: A trait that has been recently modified, most helpful when assigning taxonomic classification.

    Diastema: A space between the teeth, usually for large canines to fit when the mouth is closed.

    Dichromatic: Being able to see only blues and greens.

    Diurnal: Active during the day.

    Dry nose: The nose and upper lip are separated and the upper lip can move independently; sometimes referred to as a “hairy” or “mobile” upper lip.

    Ethnoprimatology: A subarea of anthropology that studies the complexities of human-primate relationships in the modern environment.

    Evolutionary trade-off: When an organism, which is limited in the time and energy it can put into aspects of its biology and behavior, is shaped by natural selection to invest in one adaptation at the expense of another.

    Faunivorous: Having a diet consisting of animal matter: insects, eggs, lizards, etc.

    Frugivore: Having a diet consisting primarily of fruit.

    Folivore: Having a diet consisting primarily of leaves.

    Fovea: A depressed area in the retina at the back of the eye containing a concentration of cells that allow us to focus on objects very close to our face.

    Generalized trait: A trait that is useful for a wide range of tasks.

    Grade: A grouping based on overall similarity in lifestyle, appearance, and behavior.

    Grooming claw: A claw present on the second pedal digit in strepsirrhines.

    Gummivore: Having a diet consisting primarily of gums and saps.

    Heterodont: Having different types of teeth.

    Homodont: Having only one type of tooth.

    Homology: When two or more taxa share characteristics because they inherited them from a common ancestor.

    Hone: When primates sharpen their canines by wearing them on adjacent teeth.

    Incisors: The spatula-shaped teeth at the front of the mouth.

    Insectivore: Having a diet consisting primarily of insects.

    Ischial callosities: A flattened area of the ischium on the pelvis over which calluses form; functioning as seat pads for sitting and resting atop branches.

    Knuckle-walking: A form of quadrupedal movement used by Gorilla and Pan when on the ground, where the front limbs are supported on the knuckles of the hands.

    Life history: Refers to an organism’s pace of growth, reproduction, lifespan, etc.

    Locomotion: How an organism moves around.

    Male bimaturism: Refers to the alternative reproductive strategies in orangutans in which males can delay maturation, sometimes indefinitely, until a fully mature, “flanged” male disappears.

    Molars: The largest teeth at the back of the mouth; used for chewing; in primates, these teeth usually have between three and five cusps.

    Monochromatic: Being able to see only in shades of light to dark, no color.

    Monomorphic: When males and females of a species do not exhibit significant sexual dimorphism.

    Natal coat: Refers babies with a contrasting fur color compared to adults.

    Nocturnal: Active at night.

    Olecranon process: Bony projection at the elbow end of the ulna.

    Opposable thumb or opposable big toe: Having thumbs and toes that go in a different direction from the rest of the fingers, allows for grasping with hands and feet.

    Pentadactyly: Having five digits or fingers and toes.

    Polymorphic color vision: A system in which individuals of a species vary in their abilities to see color. In primates, it refers to males being dichromatic and females being either trichromatic or dichromatic.

    Postorbital bar: A bony ring that surrounds the eye socket, open at the back.

    Postorbital closure/plate: A bony plate that provides protection to the side and back of the eye.

    Prehensile tail: A tail that is able to hold the full body weight of an organism, which often has a tactile pad on the underside of the tip for improved grip.

    Premolars: Smaller than the molars, used for chewing. In primates, these teeth usually have one or two cusps.

    Primitive trait: A trait that has been inherited from a distant ancestor.

    Quadrupedalism: Moving around on all fours.

    Rhinariums: Wet noses; produced when the nose is connected to the upper lip.

    Sagittal crest: A bony ridge along the top/middle of the skull, used for attachment of chewing muscles.

    Scent marking: The behavior of rubbing scent glands or urine onto objects as a way of communicating with others.

    Semi-brachiation: A form of locomotion in which an organism swings below branches using a combination of forelimbs and prehensile tail.

    Sexually dimorphic: When a species exhibits sex differences in morphology, behavior, hormones, and/or coloration.

    Shearing crests: Sharpened ridges that connect cusps on a bilophodont molar.

    Specialized trait: A trait that has been modified for a specific purpose.

    Styloid process of ulna: A bony projection of the ulna at the end near the wrist.

    Tactile pads: Sensitive skin at the fingertips for sense of touch. Animals with a prehensile tail have a tactile pad on the underside of the tail as well.

    Tapetum lucidum: Reflecting layer at the back of the eye that magnifies light.

    Taxa: Plural of taxon, a taxonomic group such as species, genus, or family.

    Terrestrial: Spending most of the time on the ground.

    Tetrachromatic: Having the ability to see reds, yellows, blues, greens, and ultraviolet.

    Tooth comb: A trait of the front, lower teeth of strepsirrhines in which, typically, the four incisors and canines are long and thin and protrude outward. Also referred to as dental comb.

    Trichromatic color vision: Being able to distinguish yellows and reds in addition to blues and greens.

    Vertical clinging and leaping: A locomotor pattern in which animals are oriented upright while clinging to vertical branches, push off with hind legs, and land oriented upright on another vertical branch.

    Y-5 molar: Molar cusp pattern in which five molar cusps are separated by a “Y”-shaped groove pattern.

    FOR FURTHER EXPLORATION

    Animal Diversity Web: https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Primates/specimens/ This website is hosted by the Zoology Department at the University of Michigan. It has photographs of skulls, teeth, hands, arms, and feet of many primate species.

    eSkeletons: http://www.eskeletons.org This website is hosted by the Department of Anthropology at University of Texas, Austin. It is an interactive website where you can compare specific bones from different species of primates.

    Fleagle, John G. 2013. Primate Adaptation and Evolution. Third edition. San Diego: Academic Press.

    Fuentes, Agustín, and Kimberley J. Hockings. 2010. “The Ethnoprimatological Approach in Primatology.” American Journal of Primatology 72 (10): 841–847.

    Rowe, Noel. 1996. Pictorial Guide to the Living Primates. Charlestown, VA: Pogonias Press.

    Whitehead, Paul F., William K. Sacco, and Susan B. Hochgraf. 2005. A Photographic Atlas for Physical Anthropology. Englewood, CO: Morton Publishing.


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