AI Article Synopsis

  • Old World monkeys are a diverse and successful primate group with over 130 species, recognizable by their unique dental feature called bilophodonty, which allows them to adapt their diets.
  • Their evolution diverged from apes around 30 million years ago, with incomplete fossil records prior to 18 million years complicating our understanding of their early development.
  • A newly discovered 22 million-year-old monkey fossil from Kenya shows that early Old World monkeys had simpler teeth and diets focused on fruits, with bilophodonty evolving later to accommodate a broader range of food, including leaves.

Article Abstract

Old World monkeys (Cercopithecoidea) are a highly successful primate radiation, with more than 130 living species and the broadest geographic range of any extant group except humans. Although cercopithecoids are highly variable in habitat use, social behavior, and diet, a signature dental feature unites all of its extant members: bilophodonty (bi: two, loph: crest, dont: tooth), or the presence of two cross-lophs on the molars. This feature offers an adaptable Bauplan that, with small changes to its individual components, permits its members to process vastly different kinds of food. Old World monkeys diverged from apes perhaps 30 million years ago (Ma) according to molecular estimates, and the molar lophs are sometimes incompletely developed in fossil species, suggesting a mosaic origin for this key adaptation. However, critical aspects of the group's earliest evolution remain unknown because the cercopithecoid fossil record before ∼18 Ma consists of only two isolated teeth, one from Uganda and one from Tanzania. Here we describe a primitive Old World monkey from Nakwai, Kenya, dated at ∼22 Ma, that offers direct evidence for the initial key steps in the evolution of the cercopithecoid dentition. The simple dentition and absence of bilophodonty in the Nakwai monkey indicate that the initial radiation of Old World monkeys was first characterized by a reorganization of basic molar morphology, and a reliance on cusps rather than lophs suggests frugivorous diets and perhaps hard object feeding. Bilophodonty evolved later, likely in response to the inclusion of leaves in the diet.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6442627PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1815423116DOI Listing

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