Speciation + Taxonomy 09/26/23
What defines a species?
The most used definition today ↴
Biological Species Concept: same species if they can interbreed and produce viable, fertile offspring
→ Viable = can survive
→ Reproductive Isolation = some species can produce but their species cannot produce
Some issues with this definition
Some species are asexual and autonomous (produce on their own)
Other Definitions
Morphological Species concept: species defined by similarities and differences in morphology
Some issues with this definition
Sexual dimorphism (differences in gender)
NOTE: there are multiple definitions of species but these are the most common two
MODES OF SPECIATION
Allopatric: geographic isolation
Geographic barriers separate species for so long that they become distinct species
Sympatric: no geographic isolation
Isolation within a population that over time becomes its own species
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION
Prezygotic: prevents fertilization from occurring in the first place
Geographic isolation
Incompatible genitalia
Gametic isolation (egg + sperm can’t combine)
Behavioral isolation (diff mating rituals)
Temporal isolation (mating seasons differ)
Postzygotic: barriers to reproduction after zygote forms
Hybrid inviability
↳ (often due to genetic incompatibility, such as chromosome count)
Ex: humans have 46 chromosomes and chimps have more meaning if they were to mate it wouldn’t survive because the chromosome count is off
Hybrid sterility (Liger + tigons)
↳ exist but cannot reproduce themselves
TIMING OF SPECIATION
Refers to how quickly microevolution can occur
Traditional Idea
Phyletic Grdaualsim: slow progression to a new species over time
However…
Punctuated Equilibrium: remains the same for a long period of time followed by a sudden and quick speciation event
TAXONOMY
Linnaeus: nested categories based on similarities
Binomial Nomenclature: double named [combination of genus and species]
Genus = capitalized
Species = lower case
Both are italicized
Note: if handwritten you underline it
Ex: Homo sapiens → can be abbreviated to H. sapiens in papers
CLADOGRAMS
Clade: group of species sharing evolutionary relationships
Includes closely related species (at ends of branches) and their last common ancestor (LCA-cat nodes)
→ nodes are the ones that connect the species
Ancestral Trait: trait remains the same in ancestors and descendants → hasn’t been modified
Shared with other species
Ex: having 4 limbs (both humans and dogs have 4 limbs)
Derived Trait: traits which have changed from the ancestral state; evolutionary novelty
defines/unique to a clade
Ex: humans walking on two feet
BEWARE of Convergent evolution: several species that aren’t closely related evolved with similar traits
Ex: bats and birds both have wings
Parisomy: simplest scientific explanation
→ if you have to mark it more than once on a cladogram it’s likely not parsimonious unless its in the case of convergent evolution
Primate Clade 09/28/23
Why study primates?
Knowing what traits we share with other primates helps us define what IS human
Studying primate relationships in particular we could look at behavior and anatomy which will help us when analyzing human fossils
What makes a “primate”
+ Some ancestral traits for primates (inherited from mammalian ancestors)
Body hair
Maintain body temp
Mammary glands [ability to produce milk]
Give birth to live young
Larger brain
Pentadactyl (ancestral to mammals) [5 digits]
NOTE: Ancestral mammalian dental formula= 3.1.4.3
Human: 2. 1. 2 .3 → [we’ve lost some]
Primates defined by a suit of derived traits
Adaptation for arboreal life [living in trees]
Humans live on land because we derived the traits in order to do so
Types of primate locomotion:
Quadrupedalism [walking on 4 limbs]
Either terrestrial and/or arboreal
Vertical clinging and leaping
Brachiation (only apes) [climbing monkey bars movement]
Bipedal [(only humans)
Highly Developed Vision
Less reliance on smell + more emphasis on vision
The area of smell in our brain has been reduced
[we have short snouts]
Forward-facing eyes (convergent)
Stereoscopic vision (depth) [field of vision in both eyes
overlaps]
Primates will have a post-orbital bar [open] or a post-orbital plate [closed for protection]
Hands and Feet
Prehensile [grasping] hands with opposable thumbs/big toes
Ability to touch our thumbs with our other finger
Other primates can do the same with their toes
Our fingers have nails
Sensitive fingertips [tactile pads]
Dermal ridges [fingerprints]
- Dogs have this on their noses
Other Features
Larger brains for body size, more complex brains
Extended life History
Show growth
Longer life [slow development]
Infrequent reproduction, few offspring per pregnancy
Higher parental investment
Sociality
Grooming
No migration
Strephsirrhiness
Retain more ancestral traits
Higher reliance on smell compared to other primates
Rhinarium [wet nose, like on dogs]
Scent marking
Eyes less convergent than other primates
Longer snout than other primates
“Other primates”= Haplerrhines
Small body size
Tapetum Lucidum [the reflection in animal eyes]
Derived Traits
Grooming claw(s) - 2nd digit
Tooth comb (or dental comb)
- [certain teeth climbed together] on the mandible
- Made of incisors and canine teeth
Post-orbital bar
Lemurs
Only found in Madagascar
Diverse [
Durnal, nocturnal, cathemeral: irregular, either/or
Diet varies between species
Little-to-no -sexual dimorphism [gender difference]
Females are dominant
Quadrapedalsim + vertical clinging and leaping (VCL)
Aye-Aye
Nocturnal
Rodent-like teeth [never stop growing]
Ball-and-socket joint for elongated middle finger
Percussive foraging [listen for grubs and use the long finger to dig them out to eat]
Pseudothumb -6th digit [for grasping]
Dental formula: 1.0.1.3/1.0.0.3
- no canines
Lorises, Pottos, and galagos
Southeast Asia (lorises), Central Africa (pottos + galagos)
Galagos= ‘bushbabies’
Nocturnal
Slow quadrupeds (lorises)
Happlorrhines
[Tarsiers] + [
Greater emphasis on vision
No rhinarium
Smaller snout
Eyes more convergent
Post-orbital plate
Larger brain relative to body size
No tapetumlucidum
Most diurnal
Tarsiers
Southwest Asia
A mix of traits- difficult to classify
Strepsirrhine-like
VCL- long traits
Small-bodied
Nocturnal
Grooming claws (two)
*ex: of convergent evolution b/c it developed separately
Anthropoid -like
- No rhinarium
- No tapetum lucidum
- Convergent eyes
- Almost full-orbital plate [partial]
Unique traits:
Platyrrhines (New World Monkeys)
Only non-human primates in Central and South America
Flat, wide noses-round, outward-facing nostrils
3 premolars → usually 2.1.3.3
Highly arboreal
Some with prehensile tails [grasping tails]--> with tactile pads
Semi-brachiation → use their tail alongside swinging hands
*Any monkey that has a tail that can grasp is a platyrrhine
Spider Monkeys
No thumbs
Prehensile tail
Marmosets and Tamarins
Smallest monkeys
Regularly birth twins (normal)
Many polyandrous with alloparenting
- one female mates with several males
Derived dental formula → 2.1.3.2
Catarrhines (Old + New World monkeys and Humans)
Narrow, teardrop-shaped, downward-facing nostrils
See more colors
More sexual dimorphism [distinct diffs in gender]
2 premolars → 2.1.2.3
More terrestrial
Larger body size
Cattarrhines
Cercopithecoids Hominoids
Cercopithecines Colobines
Cercopithecoids (OWM)
Most-widespread non-human primates
Bilophodant molars: 4 cusps, line up two in a row on teeth
Ischial Callosites: sitting pads → red butt
Colobines (Leaf Mokeys)
Mostly in Asia
Folivores: diet of leaves
↳ Sacculated stomachs → multi-champer stomach to digest leaves
Infants tend to have natural coats: different color than adults
Proboscis Monkey [huge nose monkeys]
Only found in Borneo
Like to live close to water
Sexually dimorphic [down to nose size]
Several webbed toes
Cercopithecines (cheek pouch monkeys)
Mostly in Africa
Frugivorous or omnivores
Presence of cheek pouches
Japanese Macaques
Northernmost non-human primate
Grow heavier coats in the winter
Excellent swimmers
“Hot tubbing”
Hominoids (Apes + humans)
Hylobatids: Lesser apes Homindis: Great apes and Humans
Y-5 molars (more ancestral form present in fossil catarrhines)
Brachaitors
Longer arms than legs [no longer true for humans]
No tails
Shorter olecranon process
Longer clavicle
Wide rib cage laterally
Extended life histories
Less offspring reproduction → Long-term parenting
Hylobatids
Gibbons and Siamangs “lesser apes”
Southeast Asia
Gibbons → Frugivorous; siamangs-folivorous
“Ischail Callosistes”
Siamamgs have throat sacs for louder vocalizations
Live in pairs → little sexual dimorphism
Orangutans
Borneo and Sumatra (Southeast Asia)
Frugivorous
Diurnal + solitary → unique to primates
High sexual dimorphism
Male bimatrusim→ flanged vs. unflanged
↳ Dom male develops fangs + throat sacs
- only one to mate w/ females
- other males sneak around
Alternate
Reproductive
Strategies
Gorilla
Found in Africa
Highly sexually dimorphic
Knuckle-walking
Silverbacks
Folivorous and frugivous
Largest primate
Chimpanzees + Bonobos
Found in Africa
Frugivory
Bonobos | Chimps |
---|---|
Slightly smaller | Slightly larger |
Parted hair | No parted hair |
Dark faces | Lighter faces |
Some sexual dimorphism
Knuckle-walking
Bonobos Sexuality
Face-to-face copulation
Mothers help sons find sexual partners
Non-reproductive copulation
Same-sex sexual encounters
Oral and manual sexual touching or genito-genital rubbing
Diffuse tension, pleasure
Humans
Similariyie with apes
No tail
Body adapted for brachiation (except limb length)
Y-5 molars
Extended life history
Similarities with African apes
Share 96% of DNA w/ gorillas, 98% with Pan [chimps + bonos]
Knuckle-walking in ancestry [LCA]
Select Human traits
Vertical forehead
Mental eminence
Bipedalism
- Foramen magnum inferior
- Convergent big toe
ANT 201: Week 5
Speciation + Taxonomy 09/26/23
What defines a species?
The most used definition today ↴
Biological Species Concept: same species if they can interbreed and produce viable, fertile offspring
→ Viable = can survive
→ Reproductive Isolation = some species can produce but their species cannot produce
Some issues with this definition
Other Definitions
Morphological Species concept: species defined by similarities and differences in morphology
Some issues with this definition
NOTE: there are multiple definitions of species but these are the most common two
MODES OF SPECIATION
Allopatric: geographic isolation
Sympatric: no geographic isolation
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION
Prezygotic: prevents fertilization from occurring in the first place
Postzygotic: barriers to reproduction after zygote forms
↳ (often due to genetic incompatibility, such as chromosome count)
Ex: humans have 46 chromosomes and chimps have more meaning if they were to mate it wouldn’t survive because the chromosome count is off
↳ exist but cannot reproduce themselves
TIMING OF SPECIATION
Refers to how quickly microevolution can occur
Traditional Idea
Phyletic Grdaualsim: slow progression to a new species over time
However…
Punctuated Equilibrium: remains the same for a long period of time followed by a sudden and quick speciation event
TAXONOMY
Linnaeus: nested categories based on similarities
Binomial Nomenclature: double named [combination of genus and species]
Note: if handwritten you underline it
Ex: Homo sapiens → can be abbreviated to H. sapiens in papers
CLADOGRAMS
Clade: group of species sharing evolutionary relationships
→ nodes are the ones that connect the species
Ancestral Trait: trait remains the same in ancestors and descendants → hasn’t been modified
Ex: having 4 limbs (both humans and dogs have 4 limbs)
Derived Trait: traits which have changed from the ancestral state; evolutionary novelty
Ex: humans walking on two feet
BEWARE of Convergent evolution: several species that aren’t closely related evolved with similar traits
Ex: bats and birds both have wings
Parisomy: simplest scientific explanation
→ if you have to mark it more than once on a cladogram it’s likely not parsimonious unless its in the case of convergent evolution
Primate Clade 09/28/23
Why study primates?
Knowing what traits we share with other primates helps us define what IS human
What makes a “primate”
+ Some ancestral traits for primates (inherited from mammalian ancestors)
NOTE: Ancestral mammalian dental formula= 3.1.4.3
Human: 2. 1. 2 .3 → [we’ve lost some]
Types of primate locomotion:
Highly Developed Vision
[we have short snouts]
Hands and Feet
- Dogs have this on their noses
Other Features
Strephsirrhiness
“Other primates”= Haplerrhines
Derived Traits
- [certain teeth climbed together] on the mandible
- Made of incisors and canine teeth
Lemurs
Aye-Aye
- no canines
Lorises, Pottos, and galagos
Happlorrhines
[Tarsiers] + [
Tarsiers
*ex: of convergent evolution b/c it developed separately
- No rhinarium
- No tapetum lucidum
- Convergent eyes
- Almost full-orbital plate [partial]
Unique traits:
Platyrrhines (New World Monkeys)
Semi-brachiation → use their tail alongside swinging hands
*Any monkey that has a tail that can grasp is a platyrrhine
Spider Monkeys
Marmosets and Tamarins
- one female mates with several males
Catarrhines (Old + New World monkeys and Humans)
Cattarrhines
Cercopithecoids Hominoids
Cercopithecines Colobines
Cercopithecoids (OWM)
Colobines (Leaf Mokeys)
↳ Sacculated stomachs → multi-champer stomach to digest leaves
Proboscis Monkey [huge nose monkeys]
Cercopithecines (cheek pouch monkeys)
Japanese Macaques
Hominoids (Apes + humans)
Hylobatids
Orangutans
↳ Dom male develops fangs + throat sacs
- only one to mate w/ females
- other males sneak around
Gorilla
Chimpanzees + Bonobos
Bonobos | Chimps |
---|---|
Slightly smaller | Slightly larger |
Parted hair | No parted hair |
Dark faces | Lighter faces |
Bonobos Sexuality
Humans
Select Human traits
- Foramen magnum inferior
- Convergent big toe