Traits
Primate Characteristics
Cont. P. C. + random
Teeth, Diets
Locomotor Adaptors (1, 2, 3, 4)
100

Mammalian Characteristics

- females give birth to live young
- having hair/fur
- females breastfeed young
all mammals have these traits from a common ancestor

100

1. Forward Facing Eyes

(as opposed to, for example, eyes at the side of your head)

eyes at the front of your face ---> no peripheral vision, but we do have overlapping visual fields that give depth perception

100

6. Smell

Energy trade-off with vision: Primate vision is very detailed, meaning more energy is spent on vision and smell is of lesser importance

we have smaller snouts in comparison to other animals

100

Life History

speed of aging, reproduction, growth; usually correlated to body size

for primates:
- long juvenile period allows for learning things like social behaviors rather than just reliance on instincts that other animals have
- single births rather than litters allow for high probability of survival into adulthood due to attention given to young

100

Diurnal vs. Nocturnal vs. Cathemeral

Diurnal: active during the day

Nocturnal: active during the night

Cathemeral: active throughout the 24h cycle

200

Primitive Traits

Ancestral traits; traits a TAXON inherits from a common distant ancestor

Ex: body hair in primates

200

2. Postorbital Bar

A bony ring that surrounds the eye socket, protects eyes from chewing muscles

200

7. Evolutionary Trade-Offs

when lots of energy is spent on one trait, others will be a bit neglected

Ex: smell in humans

200

Heterodont vs. Homodont

Heterodont: having multiple types of teeth for specific purposes

Homodont: having one type of tooth

200

1. Vertical Clinging and Leaping

when animal holds vertical branch and them jumps to another vertical branch using back legs to push off

because of this, they usually have longer legs than arms, and large hands for grasping trees

300

Derived Homologies vs. Autapomorphies

DH: Traits that have been recently evolved (indicating common ancestry) 
Ex: humans walking upright on two feet

Auta: traits unique to a taxon

300

3. Trichromatic Vision

Ability to see reds, yellows, blues, greens

(most animals are dichromatic, or only see blues + greens, which is great for night vision rather than day)

This is an evolutionary trade-off, as primates are either trichromatic (to see how ripe fruit is) or nocturnal (eat insects))

300

Arboreal vs. Terrestrial

Arboreal: (to do with trees) primates generally spend a lot of time in trees, this evolved hands + feet for a 3D environment

Terrestrial: (on the ground) like dogs/horses and their paws/hooves

Not just primates vs. non-primates! some are terrestrial

300

Canine Size

often sexually dimorphic, meaning that males have bigger canines than females

300

2. Quadrupedalism

Most common among primates

walking on all fours

because of this, legs and arms are of equal length, and they use tail for balance

400

Generalized Traits

Traits that are useful in many ways, for many things

Ex: thumbs that bend in a different way to the rest of the fingers

400

4. Brain Size

we have relatively large brain size, when compared to total body size (twice as large as expected for our body size)

400

Opposable Thumbs/Toes

ability to touch pad of thumb to any other finger, which gives the ability to grasp things, which in turn gives the ability to climb and make and use tools

Also evolved because primates grab food and bring it to our mouths rather than just eating like a horse 

400

Furgivores

Primate diet that consists of mostly fruit for sugar + vitamins, gets protein from seeds, insects, leaves

Are medium sized, as that is the growth the caloric intake can support

400

3. Brachiation

only apes do this

swinging from horizontal branch to horizontal branch

long arms, flexible shoulders and wrists, short lower back, no tail

500

Specialized Traits 

Traits that serve one purpose

Ex: our teeth were developed to much more easily chew food

500

5. Neocortex

front part of brain, where the more complex brain functions take place (like decision making)

Primates have very complex (wrinkly) brains, allowing for much more to go on up there)

500

Folivore

Primate diet that consists of mostly leaves

Usually the largest primates, as they spend most of the time digesting difficult to break down, semi-poisonous leaves with their complex digestive systems and stomachs

500

Insectivores

Primate diet that consists mainly of insects

Trade-off: they have to chase and catch insects, they don't want to spend more energy that they can obtain, thus they are small in size as insects can only provide so much nutrients

500

4. Bipedalism

moving upright on two feet

humans are the only primates that are habitually bipedal