Jump to content

Apidium: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v1.4)
Line 30: Line 30:


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.fmnh.helsinki.fi/users/haaramo/Metazoa/deuterostoma/Chordata/Synapsida/Eutheria/Primates/Parapithecoidea/Parapithecidae.htm Mikko's Phylogeny archive]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060429213138/http://www.fmnh.helsinki.fi/users/haaramo/metazoa/deuterostoma/chordata/Synapsida/Eutheria/Primates/Parapithecoidea/Parapithecidae.htm Mikko's Phylogeny archive]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/wildfacts/factfiles/441.shtml BBC's Nature Fact Files]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/wildfacts/factfiles/441.shtml BBC's Nature Fact Files]
*[http://members.tripod.com/cacajao/apidium_phiomense.html Scientific classification of Apidium phiomense]
*[http://members.tripod.com/cacajao/apidium_phiomense.html Scientific classification of Apidium phiomense]

Revision as of 23:47, 7 July 2017

Apidium
Temporal range: 36–32 Ma
Late Eocene-Early Oligocene
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
†Apidium

Osborn, 1908
Paleospecies

Apidium phiomense
Apidium moustafai
Apidium bowni
Apidium zuetina

The genus Apidium (from Latin, a diminutive of the Egyptian bull god, Apis, as the first fossils were thought to be from a type of a cow) is that of at least three extinct primates living from the late Eocene to the early Oligocene, roughly 36 to 32 million years ago. Apidium fossils are common in the Fayoum deposits of Egypt. Fossils of the earlier species, Apidium moustafai, are rare; fossils of the later species Apidium phiomense are fairly common.

Apidium and its fellow members of the Parapithecidae family are stem anthropoids that possess all the hallmarks of modern Anthropoidea.[1] Their ancestry is closely tied to the Eocene Asian group Eosimiidae.[2]

Behaviour

The Apidium species were well adapted to life in what once were the tropical forests of North Africa. They lived in trees and apparently moved on top of tree limbs by a combination of quadrupedalism and leaping, much as do living squirrel monkeys of the genus Saimiri.[3] These primates appear to have been frugivorous and diurnal, with keen eyesight.[4]

Male Apidium were bigger than the females, which, by comparing them with living primates, suggests that they probably lived in groups, where a small number of males would have had control over several females. The males had large canine teeth.[5]

References

  1. ^ Fleagle J., Kay R.F., 1987. The phyletic position of the Parapithecidae. Journal of Human Evolution 16, 483-532.
  2. ^ Kay R.F., Williams B.A., Ross C.F., Takai M., Shigehara N., 2004. Anthropoid origins: a phylogenetic analysis. In: Ross C.F., Kay R.F. (Eds) Anthropoid Origins: New Visions. Kluwer/Plenum, New York, pp. 91-135
  3. ^ Kay R.F., Simons E.L., 1980. The ecology of Oligocene African Anthropoidea. International Journal of Primatology 1, 21-37.
  4. ^ Bush E.C., Simons E.L., Allman J., 2004. High-resolution computed tomography study of the cranium of a fossil anthropoid primate, Parapithecus grangeri: New insights into the evolutionary history of primate sensory systems. Anatomical Record Part A 281A, 1083-1087.
  5. ^ Fleagle J.G., Kay R.F., Simons E.L., 1980. Sexual dimorphism in early anthropoids. Nature 287, 328-330.