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Re-evaluating the diets of Morotopithecus bishopi and Afropithecus turkanensis: An anterior dentognathic perspective
- Source :
- Journal of human evolution. 112
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Afropithecus turkanensis (17–17.5 Ma; Kalodirr, Buluk, Locherangan, Moruorot, Nabwal Hills; Kenya) and Morotopithecus bishopi (20.6 Ma; Moroto II; Uganda) are both large-bodied catarrhines from the early Miocene of eastern Africa with relatively primitive cranial and postcanine dental morphology. They are primarily differentiated by a temporal separation of ∼3.6 million years and by postcranial samples suggesting that M. bishopi was capable of orthograde postures and below-branch arboreality, while A. turkanensis was most likely a pronograde quadruped. Several researchers dispute the validity of the postcranial and dating evidence and argue that M. bishopi and A. turkanensis may be congeneric or even conspecific. Although A. turkanensis possesses a derived suite of specialized anterior dentognathic characters that are functionally convergent with extant pitheciins and associated with sclerocarp foraging and maxillary canine dietary function, a similar analysis of M. bishopi anterior dentognathic anatomy is presently lacking. The current study addresses this shortcoming via a detailed morphometric analysis of relevant A. turkanensis and M. bishopi specimens preserving the anterior palate, maxillary canines and incisors. Results indicate that the anterior dentognathic morphologies of A. turkanensis and M. bishopi are distinct and represent significantly dissimilar feeding adaptations. Specifically, M. bishopi lacks the elongated and anteriorly narrow premaxilla, lateral incisors that are more posterior and mesially positioned relative to the central incisors, and pronounced yet evenly distributed mesial curvature of the maxillary canine that are shared by A. turkanensis and extant pitheciins. Given that A. turkanensis anterior dentognathic morphology is functionally convergent with extant pitheciins to the exclusion of M. bishopi, it is likely that M. bishopi and A. turkanensis have dissimilar feeding adaptations. Although a systematic analysis is required to verify these species at the generic and species level, the absence of any substantial morphological similarity in their anterior dentognathic anatomy is most consistent with the interpretation that M. bishopi and A. turkanensis represent, at the least, different species.
- Subjects :
- Male
Cuspid
Premaxilla
Adaptation, Biological
Postcrania
Morotopithecus
Afropithecus
Species level
Catarrhini
medicine
Animals
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
0601 history and archaeology
Maxillary central incisor
050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology
Durophagy
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
060101 anthropology
biology
Fossils
Palate
05 social sciences
Maxillary canine
06 humanities and the arts
Anatomy
Africa, Eastern
biology.organism_classification
Diet
Incisor
medicine.anatomical_structure
Anthropology
Female
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10958606
- Volume :
- 112
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of human evolution
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7c35770bb0c8a5826e3f2a3227e5dd08