Station 4: Cercopithecoidea (OWM) vs. Hominoidea (Apes)

The differences in the superfamily Cercopithecoids and Hominoids can be related to the fact that the common ancestor of apes and humans was adapted for suspending the body by the forelimbs and brachiating.  The Cercopithecoids (like most mammals) are adapted for quadrupedalism (walking on all fours) while hominoids brachiate, knuckle walk, scramble, and locomote bipedally.

Cercopithecoidea (Old World Monkeys): colobus monkeys, proboscis monkeys, golden monkeys, langurs, leaf monkeys, baboons, macaques, geladas, guenons, and mandrills.

Proboscis Monkey (Photo credit: Wild Kratts Wiki)

Hominoidea (Apes and Humans): gibbons, orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, and humans.  Apes are generally larger in body size compared to other primates.

Common Gibbon (Photo credit Hugh Lansdown, Science Source)

There are some physical traits that are unique to Hominoids (Apes and Humans)

Molar Pattern

Primates can exhibit one of two morphological structures of their molars. Bilophodont molars have four cusps, or points, arranged in two parallel pairs, and are present in superfamily Cercopithecoidea. Hominoids, on the other hand, have 5 cusps that are form a “Y” space between the cusps. Humans/apes are the only group of primates to exhibit this trait.

Rhesus Macaque mandible

Tails

Apes don’t have em. (All other primates do!)

Station 4 Exercise: Look closely at the skulls and skeletons, then complete the chart below.

Reflection Question

Which do you think is the ancestral condition in Catarrhini (the group that includes Old World Monkeys, Apes and Humans):  having a tail, or being tail-less?  Why?

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