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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

  • 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

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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

  • 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