Lemuriformes
Template:Short description Template:For Template:Automatic taxobox Lemuriformes is the sole extant infraorder of primate that falls under the suborder Strepsirrhini. It includes the lemurs of Madagascar, as well as the galagos and lorisids of Africa and Asia, although a popular alternative taxonomy places the lorisoids in their own infraorder, Lorisiformes.Template:Efn
Lemuriform primates are characterized by a toothcomb, a specialized set of teeth in the front, lower part of the mouth mostly used for combing fur during grooming.Template:Sfn
Evolutionary historyEdit
Lemuriform origins are unclear and debated. American paleontologist Philip Gingerich proposed that lemuriform primates evolved from one of several genera of European adapids based on similarities between the front lower teeth of adapids and the toothcomb of extant lemuriforms; however, this view is not strongly supported due to a lack of clear transitional fossils.Template:Sfn Instead, lemuriforms may be descended from a very early branch of Asian cercamoniines or sivaladapids that immigrated to northern Africa.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Template:Cladogram Until discoveries of three 40-million-year-old fossil lorisoids (Karanisia, Saharagalago, and Wadilemur) in the El Fayum deposits of Egypt between 1997 and 2005, the oldest known lemuriforms had come from the early Miocene (~20 mya) of Kenya and Uganda. These newer finds demonstrate that lemuriform primates were present during the middle Eocene in Afro-Arabia and that the lemuriform lineage and all other strepsirrhine taxa had diverged before then.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Djebelemur from Tunisia dates to the late early or early middle Eocene (52 to 46 mya) and has been considered a cercamoniine,Template:Sfn but also may have been a stem lemuriform.Template:Sfn Azibiids from Algeria date to roughly the same time and may be a sister group of the djebelemurids. Together with Plesiopithecus from the late Eocene Egypt, the three may qualify as the stem lemuriforms from Africa.Template:Sfn
Molecular clock estimates indicate that lemurs and the lorisoids diverged in Africa during the Paleocene, approximately 62 mya. Between 47 and 54 mya, lemurs dispersed to Madagascar by rafting.Template:Sfn In isolation, the lemurs diversified and filled the niches often filled by monkeys and apes today.Template:Sfn In Africa, the lorises and galagos diverged during the Eocene, approximately 40 mya.Template:Sfn Unlike the lemurs in Madagascar, they have had to compete with monkeys and apes, as well as other mammals.Template:Sfn
Taxonomic classificationEdit
Template:See also Most of the academic literature provides a basic framework for primate taxonomy, usually including several potential taxonomic schemes.Template:Sfn Although most experts agree upon phylogeny,Template:Sfn many disagree about nearly every level of primate classification.Template:Sfn
Within Strepsirrhini, two common classifications include either two infraorders (Adapiformes and Lemuriformes)Template:Sfn or three infraorders (Adapiformes, Lemuriformes, Lorisiformes).Template:Sfn A less common taxonomy places the aye-aye (Daubentoniidae) in its own infraorder, Chiromyiformes.Template:Sfn In some cases, plesiadapiforms are included within the order Primates, in which case Euprimates is sometimes treated as a suborder, with Strepsirrhini becoming an infraorder, and the Lemuriformes and others become parvorders.Template:Sfn Regardless of the infraordinal taxonomy, crown strepsirrhines are composed of 10 families, three of which are extinct.Template:Sfn These three extinct families included the giant lemurs of Madagascar,Template:Sfn many of which died out within the last 1,000 years following human arrival on the island.Template:Sfn
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When Strepsirrhini is divided into two infraorders, the clade containing all toothcombed primates can be called "lemuriforms".Template:Sfn When it is divided into three infraorders, the term "lemuriforms" refers only to Madagascar's lemurs,Template:Sfn and the toothcombed primates are referred to as either "crown strepsirrhines"Template:Sfn or "extant strepsirrhines".Template:Sfn Confusion of this specific terminology with the general term "strepsirrhine", along with oversimplified anatomical comparisons and vague phylogenetic inferences, can lead to misconceptions about primate phylogeny and misunderstandings about primates from the Eocene, as seen with the media coverage of Darwinius.Template:Sfn Because the skeletons of adapiforms share strong similarities with those of lemurs and lorises, researchers have often referred to them as "primitive" strepsirrhines,Template:Sfn lemur ancestors, or a sister group to the living strepsirrhines. They are included in Strepsirrhini,Template:Sfn and are considered basal members of the clade.Template:Sfn Although their status as true primates is not questioned, the questionable relationship between adapiforms and other living and fossil primates leads to multiple classifications within Strepsirrhini. Often, adapiforms are placed in their own infraorder due to anatomical differences with lemuriforms and their unclear relationship. When shared traits with lemuriforms (which may or may not be synapomorphic) are emphasized, they are sometimes reduced to families within the infraorder Lemuriformes (or superfamily Lemuroidea).Template:Sfn
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
Literature citedEdit
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