A new Late Eocene primate from the Krabi Basin (Thailand) and the diversity of Palaeogene anthropoids in southeast Asia.

Proc Biol Sci

IPHEP: Institut de Paléoprimatologie, Paléontologie Humaine : Évolution et Paléoenvironnements, CNRS UMR 7262, Université de Poitiers, , 6 rue Michel Brunet, 86022 Poitiers cedex, France.

Published: November 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent findings suggest anthropoid primates originated in Asia during the Middle Eocene, challenging the previous belief that they began in Africa.
  • The Asian Eocene anthropoid community, mainly from China, Myanmar, Pakistan, and Thailand, is currently under-researched and divided into two groups: eosimiiforms and amphipithecids, with unclear phylogenetic relationships.
  • A newly described species, Krabia minuta, from Late Eocene Thailand reveals unique dental features, indicating greater morphological diversity in amphipithecids and complicating our understanding of their evolutionary connections to other primate groups.

Article Abstract

According to the most recent discoveries from the Middle Eocene of Myanmar and China, anthropoid primates originated in Asia rather than in Africa, as was previously considered. But the Asian Palaeogene anthropoid community remains poorly known and inadequately sampled, being represented only from China, Myanmar, Pakistan and Thailand. Asian Eocene anthropoids can be divided into two distinct groups, the stem group eosimiiforms and the possible crown group amphipithecids, but the phylogenetic relationships between these two groups are not well understood. Therefore, it is critical to understand their evolutionary history and relationships by finding additional fossil taxa. Here, we describe a new small-sized fossil anthropoid primate from the Late Eocene Krabi locality in Thailand, Krabia minuta, which shares several derived characters with the amphipithecids. It displays several unique dental characters, such as extreme bunodonty and reduced trigon surface area, that have never been observed in other Eocene Asian anthropoids. These features indicate that morphological adaptations were more diversified among amphipithecids than was previously expected, and raises the problem of the phylogenetic relations between the crown anthropoids and their stem group eosimiiforms, on one side, and the modern anthropoids, on the other side.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3790496PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2013.2268DOI Listing

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