New Paleocene skeletons and the relationship of plesiadapiforms to crown-clade primates
Top Cited Papers
- 23 January 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (4), 1159-1164
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0610579104
Abstract
Plesiadapiforms are central to studies of the origin and evolution of primates and other euarchontan mammals (tree shrews and flying lemurs). We report results from a comprehensive cladistic analysis using cranial, postcranial, and dental evidence including data from recently discovered Paleocene plesiadapiform skeletons (Ignacius clarkforkensis sp. nov.; Dryomomys szalayi, gen. et sp. nov.), and the most plesiomorphic extant tree shrew, Ptilocercus lowii. Our results, based on the fossil record, unambiguously place plesiadapiforms with Euprimates and indicate that the divergence of Primates (sensu lato) from other euarchontans likely occurred before or just after the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary (65 Mya), notably later than logistical model and molecular estimates. Anatomical features associated with specialized pedal grasping (including a nail on the hallux) and a petrosal bulla likely evolved in the common ancestor of Plesiadapoidea and Euprimates (Euprimateformes) by 62 Mya in either Asia or North America. Our results are consistent with those from recent molecular analyses that group Dermoptera with Scandentia. We find no evidence to support the hypothesis that any plesiadapiforms were mitten-gliders or closely related to Dermoptera.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vertebrate Dispersal of Seed Plants Through TimeAnnual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 2004
- Discovery of a highly-specialized plesiadapiform primate in the early-middle Eocene of northwestern AfricaJournal of Human Evolution, 2004
- A euprimate skull from the early Eocene of ChinaNature, 2004
- A shrew-sized origin for primatesAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2004
- New basicrania of Paleocene‐Eocene Ignacius: Re‐evaluation of the Plesiadapiform‐Dermopteran linkAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2001
- Seed Size, Fruit Size, and Dispersal Systems in Angiosperms from the Early Cretaceous to the Late TertiaryThe American Naturalist, 2000
- Phylogeny as a Central Principle in Taxonomy: Phylogenetic Definitions of Taxon NamesSystematic Zoology, 1990
- Primate origins: Lessons from a neotropical marsupialAmerican Journal of Primatology, 1990
- Diagnosis and differentiation of the order primatesAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1987
- Locomotor Adaptations as Reflected on the Humerus of Paleogene PrimatesFolia Primatologica, 1980