Module 8 Flashcards
Animal to primate:
Animalia - Metazoa - Chordata - Vertebrata - Mammalia - Eutheria - Primata - Anthropoidea (monkeys, apes, and humans) - Catarrhini (all old world monkeys, apes, and humans) - Hominoidea(apes & humans) - Hominidae (humans and human ancestors) - Homo - Sapiens.
Generalized Traits
Traits that are most similar to the earliest ancestors of a species.
Specialized Traits
Traits that are the result of adaptation to specific niches and environments, and are more recent adaptations.
Morphology
Anatomical Structures (physical body traits).
Primate adaptions
A. Limbs and Locomotion:
1. A tendency toward erect posture, especially in the upper body - (not to be confused with walking upright, which is bipedality).
Primate adaptions
A. Limbs and Locomotion:
1. A tendency toward erect posture, especially in the upper body - (not to be confused with walking upright, which is bipedality).
2. A flexible, generalized limb structure which allows most primates to practice a number of locomotor behaviors.
3.
A.
a. Hands and feet with a high degree of prehensility (grasping ability).
b. To aid prehensility: retention of five digits on
c. To aid prehensility: An opposable thumb, and in most species, an opposable big toe.
d. To aid prehensility: Nails instead of claws.
e. To aid prehensility Tactile pads enriched with sensory nerve fibers at the ends of the digits.
B. Diet and Teeth
a. Diet and Teeth: A lack of dietary specialization.
b. Diet and Teeth: Generalized dentition(heterodont), containing canines, molars, premolars, and incisors.
C. The Senses and the Brain:
a. Color vision(few primates are nocturnal).
b. Excellent depth perception (stereoscopic vision).
c. Decreased reliance on the sense of smell. The size of the structures in the brain that process smell are considerably smaller than in many other mammals, likely because as visual acuity increased, the ability to smell diminished because it became less important.
d. Expansion and increased complexity of the brain. Expansion in the visual processing areas of the brain and in the areas where association happens and where different sensory modalities are integrated allowing for building more memories.
D. Maturation, Learning, and Behavior.
a. A more efficient means of fetal nourishment, longer periods of gestation, reduced numbers of offspring, delayed maturation, and extension of the entire lifespan.
b. A greater dependence on flexible learned behavior. Due to delayed maturation there is significantly increased parental investment. Much less offspring are produced in the lifespan of the parent, and parents dedicate a lot more time to teaching offspring survival skills.
c. The tendency to live in social groups and the permanent association of adult males with the group.
Omnivorous
A diet of plant material, meat, and insects.
Herbivore
A diet of only plant material.
Carnivore
A diet of only meat.
Insectivore
A diet of only meat.
Frugivore
A diet of only fruit.
Piscivore
A diet of only fish.
Diurnal
Activity patterns during the day.
Nocturnal
Activity patterns during the day.
Stereoscopic vision
The ability to perceive objects in 3D. Helps with the ability to have superior hand/foot-eye coordination (particularly in dense environments).
- Eyes are positioned in front of the face to produce binocular vision which provides an overlapping visual field.
- Visual info from each eye is transmitted to visual centers in both cerebral hemispheres.
- Visual information from both hemispheres is organized into 3D images by specialized structures in the brain that merge the overlapping visual field and allow for depth perception.