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Tarsier brain component composition and its implications for systematics
Authors:Tracey H. Joffe  R. I. M. Dunbar
Affiliation:(1) Present address: Department of Anthropology, Geogre Washington University, 2110 G Street NW, 20052 Washington D.C., USA;(2) Present address: School of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Nichilson Building, L69 3BX Liverpool, England
Abstract:The taxonomic position ofTarsius has been a topic of some debate. Recent molecular and anatomical studies have shoen that tarsiers share a number of derived traits with Anthropoids. These include aspects of their reporductive biology and aspects of their olfactory and visual systems. It has, therefore, been suggested that, despite a number of convergences with strepsirhine primates, tarsiers should be classified with the Anthropoid primates. We use comparative analyses of relative primate brain part volumes to determine whetherTarsius should be classified as a Haplorhine. We show that, for each of seven brain components whose relative size discriminates unequivocally between Strepsirhines and Haplorhines, the tarsiers fall in the Haplorhine distribution. These results confirm their classification with the Haplorhines.
Keywords:Tarsiers  Brain evolution  Systematics  Prosimians  Haplorhines
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