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Reappraisal of <Emphasis Type="Italic">Macaca speciosa subfossilis</Emphasis> from the Late Pleistocene of Northern Vietnam Based on the Analysis of Cranial Anatomy
Authors:Tsuyoshi Ito  Takeshi D Nishimura  Brigitte Senut  Thomas Koppe  Jacque Treil  Masanaru Takai
Institution:1.Primate Research Institute,Kyoto University,Inuyama,Japan;2.Département Histoire de la Terre,Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, USM 203-UMR 5143 CNRS,Paris Cedex 05,France;3.Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology,Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University Greifswald,Greifswald,Germany;4.UMR 8555 CNRS et Service de Radiologie, Clinique Pasteur,Toulouse,France
Abstract:Jouffroy (Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle. Série 2 31:209–216, 1959) described Macaca speciosa subfossilis on the basis of her study of the external anatomy of a nearly complete cranium (PV F1; Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Paris) found in the Late Pleistocene cave deposits, Thung-Lang, northern Vietnam. Whereas Jouffroy (Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle. Série 2 31:209–216, 1959) considered it to belong to an ancestor of Macaca arctoides or M. thibetana, Fooden (Journal of Human Evolution 19:607–686, 1990) reexamined the facial anatomy and assigned it to the extant species M. arctoides. We used computed tomography images to reevaluate the phylogenetic position of Macaca speciosa subfossilis by comparing the external and internal features of PV F1 with those of the crania of the extant macaque species. PV F1 shows a lower degree of preorbital concavity than Macaca arctoides, M. assamensis, and M. thibetana, but shares an anteriorly directed malar as seen in the crania of the two former species. The size of the molars of PV F1 falls within a range such that the cranium may be assigned to any of the five species of Macaca arctoides, M. assamensis, M. thibetana, M. mulatta, and M. nemestrina. An analysis of the internal structure of the cranium reveals that only PV F1 and the cranium of Macaca arctoides have a pear-shaped nasal cavity expanding laterally at both the anterior and posterior regions. Such a feature is probably a derived condition in the macaque lineage, suggesting a close relationship between Macaca speciosa subfossilis and M. arctoides. This finding supports the paleobiological scenario that the members of the lineage of Macaca arctoides diverged from the other members of Asian macaques and became distributed in northern Vietnam as early as the Late Pleistocene.
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