
diagnostic characteristics:
1. naked,
glandular rhinarium with median cleft (called the philtrum) and slit-like
nostrils (diverticulum nasi) directed laterally. [This is the primitive condition for mammals
in general.]
2. presence
of a tooth comb, composed of lower incisors and canine teeth (secondarily lost
in Daubentoniidae) projecting forward from lower jaw, used in grooming
(Tupaiidae [Scandentia] have a similar tooth comb, but one that does not
include the canines)

3. grooming
claw on the second digit of the foot
(lemurs)
range:
Madagascar, Comoro Islands
|
1 0-1 1
3 1 1 0 3 |
= 18-20 |
|
1-2
1 3 3 2 1
3 3 |
= 34-36 |
diagnostic characters:
1. nose with simple nostrils, no rhinarium, philtrum vestigial or absent; internarial breadth wide in Tarsius and all platyrrhines (with nostrils directed somewhat laterally) and comparatively narrow in all catarrhines (with nostrils directed forward)
(tarsiers)
|
2
1 3 3 1 1
3 3 |
= 34 |
genera:
the family is monotypic – Tarsius
(tarsier)
range:
Indonesian and Philippine islands
|
tarsier
(Tarsius) |
1st
and 2nd lower left molars |
|
|
|
tarsier
(Tarsius)
Platyrrhine primates are exclusive to the New World, and include the traditional families Callitrichidae (tamarins and marmosets) and Cebidae (howler, spider, capuchin, woolly, squirrel, owl, titi, saki, and other monkeys). Sometimes Goeldi’s monkey (Callimico) is placed in its own family, the Callimiconidae. Phylogenetic analyses, including both anatomical characters as well as molecular sequences, however, suggest that this simple arrangement is incorrect. The tree below (from Horovitz, I. 1999. A phylogenetic study of living and fossil platyrrhines. American Museum Novitates, no. 3269) illustrates one phylogenetic arrangement that places the owl monkey (Aotus) and a clade comprised of the capuchins (Cebus) and squirrel monkeys (Saimiri) as sisters to the tamarins/marmosets, with the larger monkeys arranged in two clades (the Pithecidae and Atelidae). We will follow the traditional division of the Callitrichidae (including Callimico) and Cebidae here, but you should be aware of recent suggested changes.

Platyrrhines are differentiated from the Old World catarrhine monkeys and apes by the following characters:
1. three
premolars above and below, instead of two
2. nostrils
directed laterally, as opposed to forward
3. prehensile
tail present (in some genera only; unique among primates)
4. no ischial
callosities (not present in catarrhine family Hominidae)
5. dichromatic,
rather than trichromatic, color vision (except howler monkey)
(marmosets and
tamarins)
|
2
1 3 2 2 1
3 2 |
= 32 (3 molars
above and below in Callimico) |
genera:
Callimico (callimico –
sometimes placed in own family, Callimiconidae), Callithrix (tamarins), Cebuella
(pygmy marmoset), Leontopithecus
(lion tamarins), Saquinus (tamarins)
range: New World tropics, from Panama to
southern Brazil

Saguinus
(tamarin)
|
tassel-eared
marmoset (Callithrix humeralifera) |
faces
of (top to bottom): emperor
tamarin (S. imperator); black-chested moustached tamarin (S. mystax);
cotton-top tamarin (S. oedipus). |
Family CEBIDAE
(New
World monkeys)
|
2
1 3 3 2 1
3 3 |
= 36 |
genera:
Alouatta (howlers), Aotus (owl, or night, monkey), Ateles (spider monkey), Brachyteles (woolly spider monkey), Cacajao (Uakari), Callicebus (titi monkeys), Cebus
(capuchins), Chiropotes (bearded saki
monkeys), Lagothrix (woolly monkeys),
Pithecia (saki monkeys), Saimiri (squirrel monkeys)
range:
New World tropics from southern Mexico to northern Argentina
|
1st
and 2nd upper right molars of a saki monkey (Pithecia) |
|
noisy
owl monkey (Aotus vociferans) |
brown
capuchin (Cebus apella) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Catarrhine
primates are exclusively Old World (except humans, now cosmopolitan), and
include three families: the Cercopithecidae (Old World monkeys,
such as macaques, baboons, mandrills, langurs, and leaf-eating monkeys); the Hylobatidae (gibbons); and Hominidae (the great apes, including
humans). Older classifications include
the gibbons and great apes together in the family Pongidae separate from
Hominidae, which only includes Homo
among extant mammals, but both morphological and molecular data strongly
support the very close affinity of humans with chimpanzees and gorillas, and
less so with the orang, as members of the family Hominidae.
Catarrhines can
be distinghished from New World platyrrhines by the following characters:
1. two
premolars above and below, instead of three
2. nostrils
close together and directed forward and downward, not laterally
3. skull
typically robust and heavily ridged, often with a sagittal crest
4. ischial
collisities present (except in Hominidae)
5. prehensile
tail absent in all taxa, even those with long tails
6. trichromatic
color vision
7. bony shelf
(simian shelf) present at posterior border of jaw symphysis in most taxa
(notably absent in humans)

(macaques,
baboons, langurs, leaf monkeys, and others)
|
2
1 2 3 2 1
2 3 |
= 32 |
genera: subfamily
Cercopithecinae: Cercocebus (mangabeys), Cercopithecus
(guenons), Erythrocebus (patas
monkey), Macaca (macaques), Mandrillus (drill), Papio (baboons), Theropithecus
(gelada baboon)
subfamily
Colobinae: Colobus (colobus monkeys), Nasalis
(proboscis monkey), Presbytis
(leaf-eating monkeys), Pygathrix
(snub-nosed monkeys), Semnopithecus
(langurs)
range: Old World tropics and subtropics, from southwestern Europe (Gibralter) east to Japan, Africa, and southern Asia (India, Southeast Asia, Indonesia, Philippine Islands)

Papio (baboon)
|
2
1 2 3 2 1
2 3 |
= 32 |
|
2
1 2 3 2 1
2 3 |
= 32 |
|
2
1 3 3 3 1
3 3 |
= 38 |