Browsing by Subject "Euarchonta"
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Item Open Access Body Mass Prediction from Dental and Postcranial Measurements in Primates and Their Nearest Relatives(2017) Yapuncich, Gabriel StephenTo evaluate alternative hypotheses for the role of mass and muscle-induced forces in joint construction, the allometric scaling relationships of the articular facets of the talus were estimated with phylogenetic regressions. Many articular surfaces scale with significant positive allometry, suggesting that mass-induced forces are an important influence for the bony architecture of synovial joints.
Using a large sample of primates and their nearest living relatives, body mass prediction equations were generated from the articular facet areas of the talus and calcaneus. Those facets that scaled with positive allometry were both accurate and precise. Compared to previously published prediction equations, the novel equations developed for this study were substantially more reliable.
Several methodological debates for body mass prediction were also evaluated. Prediction equations had their highest correlations when species with greater than a 20% difference between sexes are represented by both males and females. Using dental measurements from cercopithecoids housed at the National Museum of Natural History, predictive accuracy was maximized when body mass was predicted using a mean value estimated from a robust sample. Even when only a single individual was represented, tests of predictive accuracy using primates with associated body masses from several localities (Hacienda La Pacifica, Costa Rica; Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania; Amboseli Reserve, Kenya; and the Duke Lemur Center) demonstrated that prediction equations provide more accurate predictions of species mean values than individual-specific values.
The importance of longitudinal change in body mass was evaluated by comparing coefficients of variation for individual and mean body mass of the populations at La Pacifica, Gombe, and the Duke Lemur Center. Individual coefficients of variation were significantly greater than the population coefficients of variation, which suggests that mean body masses are more stable “targets” of prediction.
Finally, the novel prediction equations were applied to a sample of sympatric primates with associated dental and postcranial elements from the middle Eocene of Wyoming, including Notharctus tenebrosus, Smilodectes gracilis, Omomys carteri, and Hemiacodon gracilis. New body mass predictions suggest two pairs of similarly sized primates: N. tenebrosus and S. gracilis (~2500g), and O. carteri and H. gracilis (~400g). Thus, niche partitioning between closely related taxa was probably achieved through differences in diets, rather than differences in body mass.
Item Open Access The frugivorous insectivores? Functional morphological analysis of molar topography for inferring diet in extant treeshrews (Scandentia)(Journal of Mammalogy, 2019) Selig, KR; Sargis, EJ; Silcox, MTAbstractThe 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.