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201404Jan15:35

Recon­struct­ing the New World mon­key fam­ily tree

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 04 Jan­u­ary 2014 | mod­i­fied 25 Decem­ber 2014
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When mon­keys landed in South Amer­ica 37 or more mil­lion years ago, the long-​isolated con­ti­nent already teemed with a menagerie of 30-​foot snakes, giant armadil­los and strange, hoofed mam­mals. Over time, the mon­keys forged their own niches across the New World, evolved new forms and spread as far north as the Caribbean and as far south as Patagonia.

New world monkeys treeDuke Uni­ver­sity evo­lu­tion­ary anthro­pol­o­gist Richard Kay applied decades’ worth of data on geol­ogy, ancient cli­mates and evo­lu­tion­ary rela­tion­ships to uncover sev­eral pat­terns in pri­mate migra­tion and evo­lu­tion in the Amer­i­cas. The analy­sis appeared online on 12 Decem­ber last year in the jour­nal Mol­e­c­u­lar Phy­lo­ge­net­ics and Evo­lu­tion.

Today, more than 150 species of mon­keys inhabit the New World, rang­ing in size from the pygmy mar­moset, which weighs lit­tle more than a bar of soap, to the muriqui or woolly spi­der mon­key, a long-​limbed mon­key that tips the scales at 25 pounds. The lat­ter is listed as Endan­gered accord­ing the IUCN Red List of Threat­ened Species™.

Bio­geog­ra­phy in deep time — What do phy­lo­ge­net­ics, geol­ogy, and pale­o­cli­mate tell us about early platyrrhine evolution?
prof Richard Kay, Depart­ment of Evo­lu­tion­ary Anthro­pol­ogy & Divi­sion of Earth and Ocean Sci­ences, Duke University »

“We know from mol­e­c­u­lar stud­ies that the mon­keys have their clos­est rel­a­tives in Africa and Asia — but that doesn’t explain how they got to South Amer­ica, just that they did,” said Kay, a pro­fes­sor in the evo­lu­tion­ary anthro­pol­ogy depart­ment and divi­sion of earth and ocean sci­ences at Duke.

South Amer­ica split from Africa long before mon­keys evolved, and the scarcity of mon­key ances­tors in the North Amer­i­can fos­sil record makes a south­ward migra­tion highly unlikely. That’s led sci­en­tists to spec­u­late that the ani­mals made the ambi­tious transat­lantic cross­ing on a veg­e­ta­tion raft, per­haps hurled sea­ward by a pow­er­ful storm. Or, they could have hopped more grad­u­ally, using islands that now lie at the bot­tom of the ocean.

About 11 mil­lion years passed between their arrival and the first fos­sil evi­dence of mon­keys in the Amer­i­cas, leav­ing the details of their early evo­lu­tion an unknown ‘ghost lin­eage.’ The humid, heav­ily forested envi­ron­ment of what is now the Ama­zon Basin has made both fos­sil for­ma­tion and modern-​day dis­cov­ery dif­fi­cult, but under­stand­ing what hap­pened there is the key to New World mon­key evolution.

Monkey migration amazonbasin“How­ever they got to South Amer­ica, they were evolv­ing in the Ama­zon Basin, and from time to time they man­aged to get out of the basin,” Kay said. “So if you want to learn about what was going on in the Ama­zon, you have to look at its periph­ery.” Luck­ily, Kay said, sci­en­tists can do that in places like Chile and Patag­on­ian Argentina, where he has worked col­lab­o­ra­tively for the past quar­ter cen­tury. “We know the Ama­zon has been warm and wet for a very long time, and that from time to time we got expan­sions and con­trac­tions of these cli­matic con­di­tions, like an accordion.”

The Ama­zon Basin func­tioned as a reser­voir of pri­mate bio­di­ver­sity. When cli­mate and sea level were just right, the ani­mals spread and new species emerged in periph­eral regions — Patag­o­nia, the Caribbean islands, Cen­tral Amer­ica — where the geol­ogy was more con­ducive to fos­sil preser­va­tion. Kay has uncov­ered and metic­u­lously stud­ied the mon­key fos­sils from these areas to piece together their evo­lu­tion­ary relationships.

“The gold stan­dard is mol­e­c­u­lar evi­dence,” he said. By sequenc­ing the DNA of liv­ing mon­keys, sci­en­tists have come to a clear con­sen­sus of how the dif­fer­ent species and gen­era are related. But genetic mate­r­ial dete­ri­o­rates, so researchers study­ing extinct species must rely on a proxy: the minute dif­fer­ences in shape, size and struc­ture in fos­silized bones. “It’s the only tool we have,” said Kay, but “it does a pretty good job.”

Kay stud­ied 399 dif­fer­ent fea­tures of teeth, skulls and skele­tons from 16 liv­ing and 20 extinct mon­key species from South Amer­ica and Africa. Then, using soft­ware that recon­structs evo­lu­tion­ary rela­tion­ships, he built a fam­ily tree. He com­pared that to a sec­ond tree, built strictly from the mol­e­c­u­lar stud­ies of liv­ing species, to see if the two types of stud­ies affirmed or con­tra­dicted one another. Except for a few cases, the trees looked remark­ably sim­i­lar, val­i­dat­ing con­clu­sions based on the anatomy of fossils.

Kay also looked at how long-​term changes in South America’s ancient cli­mate, mountain-​building and fluc­tu­at­ing sea lev­els might make sense of the evo­lu­tion­ary pat­tern revealed by the mon­key fos­sils. His research zeroes in on when and how mon­keys extended their ranges to the Caribbean islands and the far south­ern end of South Amer­ica, which is thou­sands of miles south of where they now live and only 600 miles from Antarctica.

The analy­sis fur­ther explains why the lin­eages that evolved out­side the Ama­zon Basin were evo­lu­tion­ary dead ends. When the cli­mate in Patag­o­nia, for instance, turned cool and arid, the pri­mates there went extinct, leav­ing no liv­ing descen­dants. Within the past 6,000 years, mon­keys of the Caribbean islands also went extinct as a result of the appear­ance of humans and/​or sea level rise. The paper sug­gests these mon­keys came from South Amer­ica rather than Cen­tral Amer­ica, float­ing there by chance, the same way their ances­tors crossed the Atlantic.



(Source: Duke Uni­ver­sity news release, 03.01.2014)


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