Late Miocene great apes are key to reconstructing the ancestral morphotype from which earliest hominins evolved. Despite consensus that the late Miocene dryopith great apes (Spain) and (Hungary) are closely related (Hominidae), ongoing debate on their phylogenetic relationships with extant apes (stem hominids, hominines, or pongines) complicates our understanding of great ape and human evolution. To clarify this question, we rely on the morphology of the inner ear semicircular canals, which has been shown to be phylogenetically informative. Based on microcomputed tomography scans, we describe the vestibular morphology of and , and compare them with extant hominoids using landmark-free deformation-based three-dimensional geometric morphometric analyses. We also provide critical evidence about the evolutionary patterns of the vestibular apparatus in living and fossil hominoids under different phylogenetic assumptions for dryopiths. Our results are consistent with the distinction of and at the genus rank, and further support their allocation to the Hominidae based on their derived semicircular canal volumetric proportions. Compared with extant hominids, the vestibular morphology of and most closely resembles that of African apes, and differs from the derived condition of orangutans. However, the vestibular morphologies reconstructed for the last common ancestors of dryopiths, crown hominines, and crown hominids are very similar, indicating that hominines are plesiomorphic in this regard. Therefore, our results do not conclusively favor a hominine or stem hominid status for the investigated dryopiths.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2015215118 | DOI Listing |
Ecol Evol
January 2025
Instituto Milenio de Oceanografía (IMO) Universidad de Concepción Concepción Chile.
Mechanisms driving the spatial and temporal patterns of species distribution in the Earth's largest habitat, the deep ocean, remain largely enigmatic. The late Miocene to the Pliocene (~23-2.58 Ma) is a period that was marked by significant geological, climatic, and oceanographic changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGene
January 2025
College of Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Engineering, West Anhui University, Lu'an, Anhui, 237012, China. Electronic address:
The East Asian tulips (Amana spp.), which are endemic to East Asia, include the species A. edulis, recognized as the source of the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) known as "Guangcigu.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
January 2025
Laboratorio de Herpetología and Museo de Zoología Alfonso L. Herrera, Departamento de Biología Evolutiva, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, Coyoacán C.P. 04510, CDMX, México. Electronic address:
The Lepidophyma sylvaticum complex occurs from west-central Nuevo León to the Sierra de Chiconquiaco in central Veracruz, Mexico. Morphological studies have revealed population groups that are "moderately divergent from each other" within the complex. In addition, a molecular phylogenetic study found L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anat
January 2025
Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, London, UK.
Argochampsa krebsi is a gavialoid crocodylian from the early Paleogene of North Africa. Based on its recovered phylogenetic relationship with South American species, it has been inferred to have been capable of transoceanic dispersal, but potential anatomical correlates for a marine lifestyle have yet to be identified. Based on CT scans of a mostly complete and well-preserved skull, we reconstruct the endocranial anatomy of Argochampsa and compare it to that of other gavialoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Divers
November 2024
State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol and Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Resources, School of Life Sciences/School of Ecology, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, China.
•Three types of from the late Oligocene and Miocene of Guangxi showcase the diversity of during this time.•Earliest Asian megafossils of are from the late Oligocene of Nanning Basin, Guangxi, China.•Fossils and modeling reveal was quite diverse and has persisted at low latitudes within Asia since late Oligocene.
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