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Semicircular canal system in early primates
Authors:Mary T Silcox  Jonathan I Bloch  Marc Godinot  Fred Spoor
Institution:a Department of Anthropology, University of Winnipeg, 515 Portage Avenue, Winnipeg, MB R3B 2E9, Canada
b Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, P. O. Box 117800, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA
c Department of Anatomical Sciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8081, USA
d EPHE, UMR 5143, Paléontologie, CC 38, Département d'Histoire de la Terre, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, 8 rue Buffon, F-75005 Paris, France
e Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, 409 Carpenter Bldg., University Park PA 16802, USA
f Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University College London, Gower St., London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
Abstract:Mammals with more rapid and agile locomotion have larger semicircular canals relative to body mass than species that move more slowly. Measurements of semicircular canals in extant mammals with known locomotor behaviours can provide a basis for testing hypotheses about locomotion in fossil primates that is independent of postcranial remains, and a means of reconstructing locomotor behaviour in species known only from cranial material. Semicircular canal radii were measured using ultra high resolution X-ray CT data for 9 stem primates (“plesiadapiforms”; n = 11), 7 adapoids (n = 12), 4 omomyoids (n = 5), and the possible omomyoid Rooneyia viejaensis (n = 1). These were compared with a modern sample (210 species including 91 primates) with known locomotor behaviours. The predicted locomotor agilities for extinct primates generally follow expectations based on known postcrania for those taxa. “Plesiadapiforms” and adapids have relatively small semicircular canals, suggesting they practiced less agile locomotion than other fossil primates in the sample, which is consistent with reconstructions of them as less specialized for leaping. The derived notharctid adapoids (excluding Cantius) and all omomyoids sampled have relatively larger semicircular canals, suggesting that they were more agile, with Microchoerus in particular being reconstructed as having had very jerky locomotion with relatively high magnitude accelerations of the head. Rooneyia viejaensis is reconstructed as having been similarly agile to omomyids and derived notharctid adapoids, which suggests that when postcranial material is found for this species it will exhibit features for some leaping behaviour, or for a locomotor mode requiring a similar degree of agility.
Keywords:semicircular canals  vestibular system  locomotion  Carpolestes  Plesiadapis  Tinimomys  Dryomomys  Microsyops  Pronothodectes  Ignacius  Adapis  Leptadapis  Magnadapis  Omomys  Shoshonius  Necrolemur  Microchoerus  Rooneyia  Notharctus  Cantius  Smilodectes  plesiadapiforms  Adapoidea  Omomyoidea
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