Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium

Dagosto, M.

Amsterdam : Elsevier
ISSN:
0047-2484
Keywords:
Anthropoids ; foot anatomy ; morphotype reconstruction ; postcranium ; prosimians
Source:
Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
Topics:
Biology
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
_version_ 1798291500778389505
autor Dagosto, M.
autorsonst Dagosto, M.
book_url http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0047-2484(90)90014-3
datenlieferant nat_lic_papers
fussnote In traditional interpretations of primate evolution prosimians are portrayed as the stem group of the Anthropoidea, and thus prosimian postcranial anatomy is considered the foundation from which the presumably more derived anthropoid postcranium evolved. This view has been questioned by other researchers who have pointed out several postcranial features of anthropoids, especially platyrrhines, which are in fact phenetically more similar to those of archaic primates and other eutherians than to prosimians. This implies that anthropoids have retained primitive primate character states for these traits, while all prosimians have derived states. If this interpretation is correct, the anthropoid postcranium is a better model for the ancestral euprimate than is any prosimian postcranium, and no currently known fossil or living prosimian can be ancestral to anthropoids. Although these two hypotheses have very different implications for the course of evolution of the primate postcranium, for the relationships of prosimians and anthropoids, and for the timing of important cladistic events in primate evolution, it proves difficult to find a decisive test for them. One line of evidence which helps to resolve this issue is an assessment of the probability that anthropoid-eutherian resemblances are homologousvs the probability that strepsirhine-tarsiiform resemblances are homologous. Since resemblances between prosimian groups are very marked and extend to many areas of the body, they are very likely to be homologous. On the contrary, most of the features in which anthropoids resemble eutherians have convergently evolved elsewhere in mammals including primates, and are therefore less likely to be homologous. On this basis it is concluded that the traditional view is correct: the special resemblances between anthropoids and other eutherians are interpreted as non homologous (i.e., reversals).
hauptsatz hsatz_simple
identnr NLZ18308831X
issn 0047-2484
journal_name Journal of Human Evolution
materialart 1
package_name Elsevier
publikationsort Amsterdam
publisher Elsevier
reference 19 (1990), S. 121-139
schlagwort Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
search_space articles
shingle_author_1 Dagosto, M.
shingle_author_2 Dagosto, M.
shingle_author_3 Dagosto, M.
shingle_author_4 Dagosto, M.
shingle_catch_all_1 Dagosto, M.
Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
0047-2484
00472484
Elsevier
shingle_catch_all_2 Dagosto, M.
Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
0047-2484
00472484
Elsevier
shingle_catch_all_3 Dagosto, M.
Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
0047-2484
00472484
Elsevier
shingle_catch_all_4 Dagosto, M.
Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
Anthropoids
foot anatomy
morphotype reconstruction
postcranium
prosimians
0047-2484
00472484
Elsevier
shingle_title_1 Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
shingle_title_2 Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
shingle_title_3 Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
shingle_title_4 Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
sigel_instance_filter dkfz
geomar
wilbert
ipn
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source_archive Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
timestamp 2024-05-06T08:33:37.662Z
titel Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
titel_suche Models for the origin of the anthropoid postcranium
In traditional interpretations of primate evolution prosimians are portrayed as the stem group of the Anthropoidea, and thus prosimian postcranial anatomy is considered the foundation from which the presumably more derived anthropoid postcranium evolved. This view has been questioned by other researchers who have pointed out several postcranial features of anthropoids, especially platyrrhines, which are in fact phenetically more similar to those of archaic primates and other eutherians than to prosimians. This implies that anthropoids have retained primitive primate character states for these traits, while all prosimians have derived states. If this interpretation is correct, the anthropoid postcranium is a better model for the ancestral euprimate than is any prosimian postcranium, and no currently known fossil or living prosimian can be ancestral to anthropoids. Although these two hypotheses have very different implications for the course of evolution of the primate postcranium, for the relationships of prosimians and anthropoids, and for the timing of important cladistic events in primate evolution, it proves difficult to find a decisive test for them. One line of evidence which helps to resolve this issue is an assessment of the probability that anthropoid-eutherian resemblances are homologousvs the probability that strepsirhine-tarsiiform resemblances are homologous. Since resemblances between prosimian groups are very marked and extend to many areas of the body, they are very likely to be homologous. On the contrary, most of the features in which anthropoids resemble eutherians have convergently evolved elsewhere in mammals including primates, and are therefore less likely to be homologous. On this basis it is concluded that the traditional view is correct: the special resemblances between anthropoids and other eutherians are interpreted as non homologous (i.e., reversals).
topic W
uid nat_lic_papers_NLZ18308831X