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Template talk:Taxonomy/Dinopithecus

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Need to edit the taxonomy of Genus Dinopithecus or the taxobox or whatever it is called.

The parent of this taxon (Dinopithecus) needs to be edited. It is not incertae sedis. It should be the Tribe Papionini.

The source for Incertae Sedis is given as McKenna and Bell, 1997. This is a general mammalian reference and not very good for primates. All primate specialist authors place this genus in the Tribe Papionini, Subfamily Cercopithecinae (e.g. Delson, 1975; Simons and Delson, 1978; Szalay and Delson, 1979; Fleagle, 1988; 1999; 2013; Jablonski, 2002; Jablonski and Frost, 2010; Gilbert, 2013; Pugh and Gilbert, 2018).

I can't edit the taxon template because it is semi-protected.

P.broomi (talk) 06:40, 4 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]

@P.broomi: can you post the complete citation? --Nessie (talk) 12:30, 4 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]
@NessieVL:Sure, any of these would work.

[1] [2] [3] [4]

Fleagle, 1999 and 2013 are subsequent editions of the same title

[5] [6] [7] [8]

If you meant something else by post, please let me know. I'm new.

Thanks P.broomi (talk) 07:16, 5 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]

 Done @P.broomi: That'll do. The change has been made. --Nessie (talk) 18:29, 5 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ Eric Delson (1975). Evolutionary History of the Cercopithecidae. Contributions to Primatology, 5: 167-217.
  2. ^ Elwyn Simons and Eric Delson (1978). Cercopithecidae and Parapithecidae. In (V. J. Maglio and H. B. S. Cooke, eds.) Evolution of African Mammals, pp. 100-119 (Harvard Univesity Press, Cambridge).
  3. ^ Frederick Szalay and Eric Delson (1979). Evolutionary History of the Primates (Academic Press, New York).
  4. ^ John Fleagle (1988). Primate Adaptation and Evolution (Academic Press, New York).
  5. ^ Nina Jablonski (2002). Fossil Old World monkeys: The late Neogene radiation. In (W. C. Hartwig, ed.) The Primate Fossil Record, pp. 255-299 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge).
  6. ^ Nina Jablonski and Stephen Frost (2010). Cercopithecoidea. In (L. Werdelin and W. J. Sanders, eds.) Cenozoic Mammals of Africa, pp. 393-428 (University of California Press, Oakland).
  7. ^ Chris Gilbert (2013). Cladistic analysis of extant and fossil African papionins using craniodental data. Journal of Human Evolution, 64: 399-433.
  8. ^ Kelsey Pugh and Chris Gilbert (2018). Phylogenetic relationships of living and fossil African papionins: combined evidence from morphology and molecules. Journal of Human Evolution, 123: 35-51.