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3.5.4: Taxonomy of the Living Primates

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    130002
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    There are over 200 species and 600+ subspecies of primates living today. They vary in size from the tiny mouse lemur, weighing in at a whopping two ounces to the male silverback gorilla who can weigh up to 400 pounds. Some are vegetarian while others are omnivores. Many live in tropical areas, but there is at least one species that lives in a temperate region where it snows. Some live exclusively in trees and others live exclusively on the ground. The diversity of primates is expressed in the classification system.

    Two Systems of Classification

    The traditional classification approach put the primates into two suborders: Prosimii and Anthropoidea. The Prosimii contained lemurs, lorises, and tarsiers while anthropoidea consisted of monkeys and apes. The traditional classification approach used levels of taxonomic complexity to determine which suborder a primate should belong.

    Most primatologists today use an approach that uses ancestral-descendent relationships to determine the suborder. In this biochemical evolutionary classification approach, there are also two suborders, but they are called Strepsirhini, which includes lemurs, aye ayes, galagos, and lorises, and Haplorhini, which includes tarsiers, monkeys, apes, and humans.

    imageedit_1_3393382634.jpg

    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\) - Strepsirhini classification

    Strepsirhini, which means "twist-nose," characteristics include:

    • snout-like nose
    • wet rhinarium (naked, moist area of skin on the snout--think dog nose)
    • heightened sense of smell
    • prominent whiskers
    • divided upper lip tied to the gums by a membrane
    • wooly fur
    • grooming claw
    • dental combs (tooth comb)

    Most Strepsirhines are nocturnal and arboreal and have specialized features, such as large eyes with a light reflecting disk, to help with night vision. They were the first suborder of primates to evolve (O'Neil 1998-2012) and are sometimes referred to as the "lower primates."

    imageedit_4_3549718696.jpg

    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\) - Abbreviated Haplorhini classification

    Haplorhini, which means "simple nose," characteristics include:

    • relatively flattened faces (when compared to Strepsirhini)
    • forward facing eyes
    • postorbital enclosure (bony plate encloses back of eye socket)
    • dry noses
    • decreased reliance on sense of smell
    • larger brains and body size (when compared to Strepsirhini)
    • diastema (space between upper lateral incisor and upper canine tooth) except in humans
    • increased gestation, maturation, and parental care
    • more mutual grooming

    References

    1. Jurmain R, Kilgore L, Trevathan W. Essentials of physical anthropology, 4th edition. Belmont (CA): Wadsworth, Cengage Learning; 2013. 437 p.
    2. Larsen CS. Our origins: discovering physical anthropology, 3rd edition. New York (NY): W.W Norton & Company, Inc.; 2014. 478 p.
    3. O'Neill, D. 2014. The Primates [Internet]. San Marcos (CA): Palomar College; [cited 2015 Jun 22]. Available from: anthro.palomar.edu/primate/Default.htm
    4. Suborder Strepsirhini [Internet]. c. 2001-2007. Edinburgh (Scotland): The Natural History Collections of the University of Edinburgh: [cited 2015 Jun 22]. Available from: http://www.nhc.ed.ac.uk/index.php?page=493.504.513

    This page titled 3.5.4: Taxonomy of the Living Primates is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Tori Saneda & Michelle Field via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.