Strepsirrhine Characteristics
Types of Strepsirrhine
Haplorrhines
Platyrrhines
Catarrhines + Ceropithecoidea
100

Grooming Claws

- derived trait
- elongated nail that hooks like claw, to clean themselves and get food
- in the second digit of each foot

100

Lemurs

- only primates in Madagascar, thus very diverse
- communicate via scent glands all over body
- live in simple groups with uncomplicated dynamics
- size ranges from mouse to big house cat
- some are highly seasonal breeders (one breed has 6h yearly window)

100

Vision and Smell

- diurnal (thus trichromatic)
- have a fovea (indent in retina at the back of the eye that allows them to see details close up)
- they have short snouts with "dry nose"

100

Location, Diversification

- South + Central Americas
- aka New World Monkeys
- only non-human primates there, and as such they are very diversified

100

Both (nose, premolars, size + sexual dimorphism, vision)

- includes humans
- distinctive "teardrop shaped" nostrils that face downward
- one fewer premolar than most other primates
- largest + most sexually dimorphic
- most developed trichromatic vision

200

Tooth Comb

- incisor teeth are elongated and smoothed together
- used for grooming and to get insects off of tree bark
- most strepsirrhine have 6 teeth in this comb

200

Lorises, Pottos, Galagos

-basically in all equitorial areas
- share environments with monkeys and apes, thus they are less diverse (no way to fill ecological niches)

200

Size, Locomotion

- generally larger than Strepsirrhine, most are quadrupedal
- generally live in groups

200

Characteristics (noses, tails, size + weight, dental formula, sexual dimorphism, vision)

- flat, wide noses, with wide, round nostrils
- prehensile tails have tactile pads at end
- 2.1.3.3
- smaller than catarrhines, weigh under 30 kg (66 lbs)
- not very sexually dimorphic
- mid, polymorphic color vision (dependant on if they are heterozygous or homozygous for seeing color)

200

Cer.: Leaf Monkeys (location, diet, natal coats, noses)

- mostly in Asia
- mostly arborial, thus mostly folivores (some eat seeds)
- infants with natal coats (fur that is different then that of their parents, so they are more visible to mother)
- silly noses

300

Rhinarium

- primitive mammalian trait
- wet nose
- they rely on their sense of smell rather than vision to mark territory and find mates

300

Tarsiers: location, vision, feet + ears size, diet, size of social circle

- Southeast Asia
- superb eyesight (eyes bigger than stomach/brain) (they are nocturnal, and compensate with their eyes, their skulls look crazy lol)
- have a postorbital plate
- elongated feet, large ears
- they eat insects
- live in small groups

300

Golden Lion Tamarins

- silky blond-ish hair
- highly hunted for pets/as trophies

300

Cer.: Cheek-pouch Monkeys (location, diet, cheeks)

- mostly in Africa, but kinda everywhere
- mostly terrestrial, thus more frugivorous or omnivorous
- can pack food in cheeks and run from predators

400

Scent Marking

- for communication
- rubbing scent glands or urine onto things
- strepsirrhine groups communicate in less complex manners socially (not grooming each other or vocally communicating, etc.)

400

Infraorder Tarsiiformes

- only survivors 

400

Pygmy Marmosets

- smallest monkey in the world
- they screech very loudly

400

Proboscis Monkeys

- Example of silly noses
- trade-off: small brains so they can digest food (at times they have 25% of body weight in stomach)

500

Tapetum Lucidum

- primitive mammalian trait
- reflexive tissue at back of eyeball that allows for better night vision
- causes "eye shine"
- they are mostly nocturnal

500

Hap. vs. Strep. vs. secret 3rd thing debate

Hap.: dry noses, a fovea, no tapetum lucidum
Strep.: only type of hap. that does cling-leaping, they are nocturnal
Unique: two grooming claws (one on each foot), can rotate head 180°, faunivorous diet (only eat other animals), they hunt small pray (usually not primate behavior)

500

Spider Monkeys

- long tail
- some of the largest monkeys in the Americas

500

Chacma Baboons + Stump-Tailed Macaques + Mandrills

Chacma Baboons: complex behavior, live in vast types environments, eat anything, capable of fighting in groups
Macaques: stuff food into cheeks if they see predator, live on an island making survival hard due to humans
Mandrills: largest + most colorful, live in groups of hundreds, Congo River Basin, large verity in diet

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