The 'haplorrhines', the "dry-nosed" primates (the Greek name means "simple-nosed"), are members of the 'Haplorrhini'
clade: the
prosimian tarsiers and all of the true
simians (the
monkeys and the
apes, including humans).
The
omomyids are an extinct group of prosimians, believed to be more closely related to the tarsiers than to any strepsirrhines, and are considered the most primitive haplorrhines.
Haplorrhines are considered to be less primitive than the
strepsirrhine "wet-nosed" primates (whose Greek name means "curved nose"), the other suborder of primates. Their upper lip is not directly connected to their nose or gum, allowing a large range of facial expressions. Their brain to body ratio is significantly greater than the strepsirrhines, and their primary sense is vision. Most species are
diurnal (the exceptions being the tarsiers and the
night monkeys) and have
trichromatic color vision. Their hands and feet are more generally adapted, with specialization only for locomotion, such as the hooked hands common to
gibbons and
orangutans, or the human bipedal feet.
All of the simians have a single-chambered uterus; tarsiers have a bicornate uterus like the strepsirrhines. Most species have single births, although twins and triplets are common for
marmosets and
tamarins. Despite similar gestation periods, haplorrhine newborns are relatively much larger than strepsirrhine newborns, but have a longer dependence period on their mother. This difference in size and dependence is credited to the increased complexity of their behavior and natural history.
Classification and evolution
Haplorrhini and its sister clade, Strepsirrhini ("wet-nosed" primates), parted ways about 63 million years ago. The first division within the haplorrhines is the tarsier family
Tarsiidae standing alone in infraorder Tarsiiformes. This split happened about 58 million years ago, a short time from an evolutionary perspective. This could be why the prosimian tarsiers used to be grouped with the rest of the strepsirrhines.
The remaining clade is the infraorder
Simiiformes (formerly Anthropoidea), which is into two parvorders:
Platyrrhini (the
New World monkeys) and
Catarrhini (the
Old World monkeys and
apes). The New World monkeys split from the Old World about 40 mya, while the apes diverged about 25 mya. The current theory has the ape/monkey split happening in Africa. However, the recent discovery of three new
anthropoid fossils (''
Bugtipithecus inexpectans'', ''
Phileosimias kamali'' and ''
Phileosimias brahuiorum'') in
Pakistan's
Bugti Hills is causing some scientists to revise this thinking.
In the cladist perspective of daughter groups nested within ancestral groups, humans and extinct bipedal humanoids, (including
australopithecines, ''Kenyanthropus platyops'' and a few others) -are grouped together in the tribe,
Hominini. Hominines are classed together with knuckle-walking apes, (formerly known as
pongids) and are collectively referred to as
great apes [Hominidae] because they each possess all the traits indicative of that clade. Similarly, all apes, large or small, living or extinct, (including humans) still share all the definitive biological traits of Haphorrhini in general, and Catarrhini specifically, and are members of each of those clades also.
★ 'ORDER
PRIMATES'
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★ Suborder
Strepsirrhini: non-tarsier prosimians
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★ 'Suborder Haplorrhini': tarsiers, monkeys and apes
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★ Infraorder
Tarsiiformes
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★ Family
Tarsiidae: tarsiers
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★ Infraorder
Simiiformes
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★ Parvorder
Platyrrhini: New World monkeys
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★ Family
Cebidae: marmosets, tamarins, capuchins and squirrel monkeys
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★ Family
Aotidae: night or owl monkeys (douroucoulis)
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★ Family
Pitheciidae: titis, sakis and uakaris
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★ Family
Atelidae: howler, spider and woolly monkeys
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★ Parvorder
Catarrhini
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★ Superfamily
Cercopithecoidea: Old World monkeys
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★ Family
Cercopithecidae
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★ Superfamily
Hominoidea: apes
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★ Family
Hylobatidae: lesser apes (gibbons)
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★ Family
Hominidae: great (large) apes including humans
References
★ ''Primate Taxonomy'' (Smithsonian Institute Press, 2001),
Colin Groves (ISBN 1-56098-872-X)
★ ''Primates in Question'' (Smithsonian Institute Press, 2003), Robert W. Shumaker & Benjamin B. Beck (ISBN 1-58834-176-3)
★
★
Neotropical Primates 10(3)