Browsing by Subject "Pitheciidae"
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Item Open Access Oldest known cranium of a juvenile New World monkey (Early Miocene, Patagonia, Argentina): implications for the taxonomy and the molar eruption pattern of early platyrrhines.(J Hum Evol, 2014-09) Perry, Jonathan MG; Kay, Richard F; Vizcaíno, Sergio F; Bargo, M SusanaA juvenile cranium of Homunculus patagonicus Ameghino, 1891a from the late Early Miocene of Santa Cruz Province (Argentina) provides the first evidence of developing cranial anatomy for any fossil platyrrhine. The specimen preserves the rostral part of the cranium with deciduous and permanent alveoli and teeth. The dental eruption sequence in the new specimen and a reassessment of eruption patterns in living and fossil platyrrhines suggest that the ancestral platyrrhine pattern of tooth replacement was for the permanent incisors to erupt before M(1), not an accelerated molar eruption (before the incisors) as recently proposed. Two genera and species of Santacrucian monkeys are now generally recognized: H. patagonicus Ameghino, 1891a and Killikaike blakei Tejedor et al., 2006. Taxonomic allocation of Santacrucian monkeys to these species encounters two obstacles: 1) the (now lost) holotype and a recently proposed neotype of H. patagonicus are mandibles from different localities and different geologic members of the Santa Cruz Formation, separated by approximately 0.7 million years, whereas the holotype of K. blakei is a rostral part of a cranium without a mandible; 2) no Santacrucian monkey with associated cranium and mandible has ever been found. Bearing in mind these uncertainties, our examination of the new specimen as well as other cranial specimens of Santacrucian monkeys establishes the overall dental and cranial similarity between the holotype of Killikaike blakei, adult cranial material previously referred to H. patagonicus, and the new juvenile specimen. This leads us to conclude that Killikaike blakei is a junior subjective synonym of H. patagonicus.Item Open Access Preliminary notes on a newly discovered skull of the extinct monkey Antillothrix from Hispaniola and the origin of the Greater Antillean monkeys.(J Hum Evol, 2011-01) Kay, RF; Hunt, KD; Beeker, CD; Conrad, GW; Johnson, CC; Keller, JItem Open Access Unique nasal turbinal morphology reveals Homunculus patagonicus functionally converged on modern platyrrhine olfactory sensitivity.(Journal of human evolution, 2022-04-21) Lundeen, Ingrid K; Kay, Richard FThe phyletic position of early Miocene platyrrhine Homunculus patagonicus is currently a matter of debate. Some regard it to be an early member of the Pitheciidae, represented today by the sakis, uakaris, and titi monkeys. Others view Homunculus as a stem platyrrhine, part of a group that diversified in Patagonia and converged in some respects on modern pitheciine dental and gnathic morphology and perhaps seed-eating specialization. New details of its internal nasal anatomy are pertinent to resolving this debate. In addition, they provide a new perspective on how modern platyrrhine olfactory sensitivity evolved. Here we reconstruct the internal nasal anatomy of Homunculus from high-resolution computed tomography scans. This species has three ethmoturbinals, the scrolls of bone in the nasal fossa that were covered in sensory epithelium in vivo. This condition stands in stark contrast to extant platyrrhines, and indeed to all other haplorhines, which have only two ethmoturbinals or, in the case of all pitheciid platyrrhines, only one ethmoturbinal. Quantitatively, however, Homunculus has an olfactory turbinal surface area that falls within the modern platyrrhine distribution, suggesting that while turbinal numbers differ, olfactory sensitivity in this taxon was likely comparable to that of modern platyrrhines. These new data from the fossil record provide further support for the hypothesis that Homunculus is a stem platyrrhine that functionally converged on modern platyrrhines rather than being an early representative of any extant clade.