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Chapter%205%20An%20Overview%20the%20Primates

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Title: Chapter%205%20An%20Overview%20the%20Primates


1
Chapter 5An Overview the Primates
  • Key Terms

2
  • prosimiansMembers of a suborder of primates
    (lemurs, lorises and tarsiers).
  • anthropoidsMembers of a suborder of primates
    (monkeys, apes and humans).

3
  • primitiveReferring to a trait or a combination
    of traits present in an ancestral form.
  • specializedEvolved for a particular function
    usually refers to a specific trait.

4
  • primatologistsScientists who study the
    evolution, anatomy, and behavior of nonhuman
    primates.
  • morphologyThe form of anatomical structures can
    also refer to the entire organism.

5
  • omnivorousHaving a diet consisting of many food
    times (plants, meat and insects).
  • nocturnalActive at night.

6
  • diurnalActive during the day.
  • stereoscopic visionVisual images are, to varying
    degrees, superimposed on one another. Provides
    for depth perception or the perception of three
    dimensions.

7
  • binocular visionVision characterized by
    overlapping visual fields provided by forward
    facing eyes.
  • arborealtree living

8
  • arboreal hypothesisView that primate
    characteristics can be explained as a consequence
    of primate diversification in arboreal habitats.
  • visual predation hypothesisPrimates may have
    first adapted to shrubby forest undergrowth and
    the lowest tiers of the forest canopy, where they
    captured insects and other small prey primarily
    through stealth.

9
  • adaptive nicheThe entire way of life of one
    organism where it lives, what it eats, how it
    gets food, how it avoids predators, etc.
  • intelligenceThe ability to learn, reason, or
    comprehend and interpret information, facts,
    relationships, meanings, etc.

10
  • arboreal hypothesisThe traditional view that
    primate characteristics can be explained as a
    consequence of primate diversification into
    arboreal habitats.
  • cuspsThe elevated portions on the chewing
    surfaces of premolar and molar teeth.

11
  • quadrupedalUsing all four limbs to support the
    bodyduring locomotion.
  • brachiationA form of locomotion in which the
    body is suspended beneath the hands and support
    is alternated from one limb to the other arm
    swinging.

12
  • hominoidsMembers of the superfamily Hominoidea
    includes apes (chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas,
    orangutans, gibbons, and siamangs) and humans.
  • sexual dimorphismDifferences in physical
    characteristics between males and females of the
    same species.

13
  • estrusPeriod of sexual receptivity in female
    mammals correlated with ovulation.
  • homoplasyThe separate evolutionary development
    of similar characteristics in different groups of
    organisms.

14
  • hominoidsThe formal description for the
    superfamily of anthropoids that includes apes
    and humans.
  • frugivorousHaving a diet composed primarily of
    fruit.
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