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Dive into the world of nonhuman primates with this comprehensive guide, exploring their diversity, anatomy, behavior, and ecological roles. Discover the fascinating characteristics and behaviors of strepsirhines, haplorhines, and hominoids, as well as their dietary strategies, territorial ranges, and interactions with predators. Gain a deeper understanding of these integral members of tropical forest ecosystems.
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The Primate Radiation Mammals are divided into three groups: Metatheria Prototheria Eutheria
The Primate Radiation (cont’d) • The extraordinary diversity of nonhuman primates • 300 species of nonhuman primates are recognized • More than 400 taxa or varieties • Size and form vary greatly • Body shapes vary tremendously
The Primate Radiation (cont’d) What Exactly is a Primate?: Primate Suborders Strepsirhini and Haplorhini Prosimian and Anthropoid
The Primate Radiation (cont’d) • Anatomical Traits • Grasping hands/opposable thumbs and big toes • Flattened nails • Forward-facing eyes with stereoscopic vision • Generalized body plan • Generalized teeth • Petrosal bulla • Enclosed orbits
The Primate Radiation (cont’d) • Life History Traits • Single offspring • Large brains • Encephalization • Neocortex • Extended ontogeny • Lifecycle • Sociality • Living in groups
The Primate Radiation (cont’d) • Behavioral Traits • Activity Patterns • Diurnal • Nocturnal • Crepuscular (active during dawn and dusk) • Sociality • Living in groups
A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates • The Strepsirhines • The Lemurs • Madagascar • Lemuridae • Cheirogalidae • Indriidae • Daubentoniidae • The Lorises • Tropical Africa and Asia • Galagos
A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates (cont’d) • The Haplorhines • The Tarsiers • New World Monkeys • Old World Monkeys • The Hominoids
A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates (cont’d) • New World Monkeys • Infraorder Platyrrhini • Superfamily Ceboidea • Small body size • Three premolar teeth • Arboreality • Prehensile tails
A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates (cont’d) • Old World Monkeys • Infraorder Catarrhini • Superfamily Cercopithecoidea • Ischial callosites • Bilophodant molars • Estrus (in some)
A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates (cont’d) • The Hominoids • Apes • Hylobatidae • Pongidae • Encephalization • Brachiation • Extended ontogeny • Social complexity
A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates (cont’d) • Apes • Gibbons • 14 species • Asia/ Indonesia • Orangutans • Indonesia • Gorillas • Africa • Chimpanzees • Africa • Bonobo/ Chimpanzee
Primate Ecology • Diet • Most primates are herbivores • frugivores • folivores • Phenology • Dietary and Digestive Strategies • Strategic foraging
Primate Ecology (cont’d) • You Are What You Eat: Dietary and Digestive Strategies • In general, the largest-bodied primates rely the least on insect prey • Chimpanzees and capuchin monkeys forage for insects intensively and at times consume large numbers of them • Gorillas don’t eat many insects • Very small-bodied primates rarely eat large quantities of leafy matter
Primate Ecology (cont’d) • Diet • Primates select food to balance an energy budget of nutrients and calories that requires them to forage all day long • Diet and Feeding Competition • Nonhuman primates engage in feeding competition and use well-defined areas of their habitat to find food and shelter predation • Activity budget allows compensation for calories expended with calories consumed
Primate Ecology (cont’d) • Territorial Ranges • All mammals, including nonhuman primates, live in defined places called home ranges • This area can be very limited, smaller than a football field in the case of some nocturnal strepsirhines, or many square kilometers in the case of some apes and monkeys • The range must contain all the resources needed by a nonhuman primate or a social group: water, food, shelter, and mates
Primate Ecology (cont’d) • Predation • Nonhuman primates in the wild face challenge of finding food while avoiding attacks by predators • Failing to find food will leave a monkey hungry the next day, but failing to avoid an attack by an eagle or leopard will leave it dead or injured • Behavioral defenses against predators
Primate Communities • Primate communities, like communities of other animals, are integral parts of tropical forest ecosystems