4.3 Article

Unique nasal turbinal morphology reveals Homunculus patagonicus functionally converged on modern platyrrhine olfactory sensitivity

期刊

JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
卷 167, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2022.103184

关键词

Turbinate; Conchae; Platyrrhini; Olfaction; Pitheciidae

资金

  1. PICT [26219, 0143]
  2. CONTCET PIP [1054]
  3. UNLPN [647]
  4. NSF [BCS 0851272, DDIG 0925793, BCS 1440742, 1552848, BCS 1317525, BCS 1552848]
  5. National Geographic grants
  6. Wenner Gren Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The phyletic position of early Miocene platyrrhine Homunculus patagonicus is currently debated, with some considering it an early member of Pitheciidae and others viewing it as a stem platyrrhine. New details of its internal nasal anatomy help in resolving this debate and provide insight into the evolution of modern platyrrhine olfactory sensitivity. The fossil record data support the hypothesis that Homunculus functionally converged on modern platyrrhines rather than being an early representative of any extant clade.
The phyletic position of early Miocene platyrrhine Homunculus patagonicus is currently a matter of debate. Some regard it to be an early member of the Pitheciidae, represented today by the sakis, uakaris, and titi monkeys. Others view Homunculus as a stem platyrrhine, part of a group that diversified in Patagonia and converged in some respects on modern pitheciine dental and gnathic morphology and perhaps seed-eating specialization. New details of its internal nasal anatomy are pertinent to resolving this debate. In addition, they provide a new perspective on how modern platyrrhine olfactory sensitivity evolved. Here we reconstruct the internal nasal anatomy of Homunculus from high-resolution computed tomography scans. This species has three ethmoturbinals, the scrolls of bone in the nasal fossa that were covered in sensory epithelium in vivo. This condition stands in stark contrast to extant platyrrhines, and indeed to all other haplorhines, which have only two ethmoturbinals or, in the case of all pitheciid platyrrhines, only one ethmoturbinal. Quantitatively, however, Homunculus has an olfactory turbinal surface area that falls within the modern platyrrhine distribution, suggesting that while turbinal numbers differ, olfactory sensitivity in this taxon was likely comparable to that of modern platyrrhines. These new data from the fossil record provide further support for the hypothesis that Homunculus is a stem platyrrhine that functionally converged on modern platyrrhines rather than being an early representative of any extant clade. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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