Lecture 15 - Primates Flashcards
What is a Primate (4 traits)
Prosimians and Anthropoidea, mostly arboreal (living in trees), hands and feet that are efficient at grasping, flattened nails instead of claws
What is a Prosimian? (4 traits)
Paraphyletic group, mostly small-bodied, arboreal, mostly nocturnal
What types of prosimians are there? (3 types)
Lemurs/lorises, pattos, tarsiers
Lemurs traits (3)
Live in madagascar, nocturnal and diurnal, most are omnivorous
Lorises traits (4)
Native to Southeast Asia, nocturnal, some are insectivores (mostly eat insects), some are frugivores (mostly eat fruit)
Tarsiers traits (3)
Native to Southeast Asian islands, nocturnal, the only extant entirely carnivorous primates
Pattos traits (4)
Native to Africa, nocturnal, eat fruits and insects, vestigial index finger
Anthropoid types (4)
New World Monkeys, Old World Monkeys, Gibbons, Hominidae
What is a New World Monkey? (3 traits)
Native to Central and South America, have prehensile tails (tails adapted to grasp objects), lineage moved to South America around 40 mya
What is an Old World Monkey? (3 traits)
Native to Africa and Asia, Do not have prehensile tails, more closely related to Apes than the New World Monkeys
What is a Gibbon? (3 traits)
Known as the Lesser Apes, Lack tails, Native to Southeast Asia
What is a Hominid? (6)
Includes orangutans, gorillas, bonobos, chimps, humans, all of whom lack tails
What is an orangutan? (3 traits)
Includes two species, native to Borneo and Sumatra (southeast Asian Islands), Quadrupedal locomotion
What is a Gorilla? (4 traits)
Include the Western and Eastern gorilla, native to tropical Africa, largest extant hominids, quadrupedal locomotion
What is a Chimpanzee? (4 traits)
Common chimpanzee and bonobo, native to tropical Africa, the closest living relatives of humans, quadrupedal locomotion