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Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological adaptation to diet in platyrrhine primates

TLDR
Z-scores calculated from geometric predictions for several features of the feeding apparatus thought to have some functional significance are compared to a profile of the naturalistic dietary behavior of these species, finding several features are found exclusively in those platyrrhines whose dietary preferences are the most limited.
Abstract
Morphological features of the jaws and teeth are examined in eight species of platyrrhine monkeys that coexist in the Suriname rainforest. Z-scores calculated from geometric predictions for several features of the feeding apparatus thought to have some functional significance (e.g., tooth dimensions, jaw robusticity, leverage of primary jaw elevators) are compared to a profile of the naturalistic dietary behavior of these species (i.e., proportions of fruit mesocarp, seeds, leaves, and fauna eaten). Several features are found exclusively in those platyrrhines whose dietary preferences are the most limited. Such specializations appear to be associated with a particular protein source exploited by a species to supplement a largely frugivorous diet. Ateles paniscus, which feeds primarily on the mesocarp of ripe fruit, has an adaptive morphology that emphasizes broad incisors. Chiropotes satanas (and to a slightly lesser extent, Pithecia pithecia) is a frugivore/seed predator with large upper and lower canines and a robust mandible. The frugivore/folivore Alouatta seniculus has a relatively large total molar area and effective mandibular condyle height. In all four of these strictly vegetarian species, the leverage of the masseter muscle is greater than that of temporalis. Of the omnivorous species, Cebus apella and C. nigrivittatus exploit both fauna and seeds for protein and exhibit an array of many of the above features, such as large teeth and thick mandibles. Saimiri sciureus, not particularly known for seed predation, departs from Cebus in having less robust canines and a more gracile mandible. All three cebid omnivores have a temporalis with greater leverage than the masseter, indicating a requirement for resisting anteriorly directed forces, for example, using the jaws for vigorous foraging. The lack of any enlarged features, other than incisors, in the omnivorous Saguinus midas may be attributable to the functional constraints of small body size. Because the small size of the gape limits the size of the food parcel ingested, a requirement to enlarge other dentomandibular structures for trituration is alleviated.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Functional ecology and evolution of hominoid molar enamel thickness: Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii and Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii.

TL;DR: The divergent molar characteristics of Pan troglodytes and Pongo pygmaeus provide an instructive paradigm for examining the adaptive form-function relationship between molar enamel thickness and food hardness, and data reported, among the first reported for hominoid primates, fill an important empirical void for evaluating the mechanical plausibility of putative hominin food objects.
Book ChapterDOI

Mechanical and Nutritional Properties of Food as Factors in Platyrrhine Dietary Adaptations

TL;DR: The goal in this chapter is to examine the diversity of platyrrhine responses to this second variable – gaining access to and processing foods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Craniodental biomechanics and dietary toughness in the genus Cebus.

TL;DR: A constrained lever model is used to compare the masticatory adaptations of C. apella to other cebids and atelids and shows that the temporalis and masseter muscles in C. apes are more anteriorly positioned relative to nine other platyrrhine taxa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Feeding behavior, diet, and the functional consequences of jaw form in orangutans, with implications for the evolution of Pongo.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that Bornean orangutans exhibit structural features of the mandible that provide greater load resistance abilities to masticatory and incisal forces is tested and results suggest that P. p.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scale issues in the study of primate foraging: red colobus of Kibale National Park.

TL;DR: Behavioral flexibility blurs the traditional stereotypic assessment of primates; a study of one group that occupies a specific habitat at one point in time may not adequately represent the species.
References
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Book

Problems of relative growth

Julian Huxley
TL;DR: This detailed study of the different rates of growth of parts of the body relative to the body as a whole represents Sir Julian Huxley's great contribution to analytical morphology, and it is still a basis for modern investigations in morphometrics and evolutionary biology.
Book

Five New World Primates: A Study in Comparative Ecology

John Terborgh
TL;DR: This work is an intensive study of five species of New World monkeys--all omnivores with a diet of fruit and small prey; they differ widely in group size, social system, ranging patterns, and degree of territoriality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Size Allometry: Size and Shape Variables with Characterizations of the Lognormal and Generalized Gamma Distributions

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that isometry is possible with respect to at most one size variable, or in other words that shape will always be related to a variety of size variables.
Journal ArticleDOI

The functional adaptations of primate molar teeth

TL;DR: The second molars of insectivorous species were found to parallel closely those of leaf-eating species, and the smallest Living primate leaf-eater is on order of magnitude larger than the largest living primate insectivore.
Book ChapterDOI

The Seed-Eaters: A New Model of Hominid Differentiation Based on a Baboon Analogy

TL;DR: In this article, an attempt to reopen the problem of origins by examining critically some of the existing models of hominid differentiation, and to suggest a new one based on a fresh approach.
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