Film and Review. Anthropology HW.

Physical Anthropology 1 Assignment #2

Life – The Primates

Based on BBC Documentary Film

LINK TO FILM HERE

Click the link above to watch the film I own at Amazon. Click the green “Watch from beginning” button on the screen. You must be using a computer to watch the film. If you try to use a smart phone it will not send you to the film I own.

Background

Answer these questions before watching the video by using your text or searching online for answers. Then use the link above to watch the film and answer the other questions.

  1. All animals in this episode of Life are from the Primate order. This is the full classification of the Primate order. List one major characteristic that helps define each level.

Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata

Class: Mammalia

  1. A cladogram for the major groups of primates is shown to the right. The order is divided into two categories: prosimians and anthropoids. Film and Review. Anthropology HW. 1


    1. Which group evolved earliest?

    1. Which group(s) evolved most recently?

    1. Would humans be considered prosimians or anthropoids?

    1. According to this cladogram, which group of primates is most closely related to humans?

Primates are divided into two groups: Prosimians and Anthropoids. This table summarizes the differences.

Prosimians

Anthropoids

Brain Size

Smaller

Larger

Nails vs. Claws

Claws

Nails

Vision

Partial binocular vision (both eyes facing the same direction working together)

Binocular and color vision

Body Size

Smaller

Larger

Habitats

Tropical rainforests

Tropical rainforests, grasslands, temperate forests, wetlands

Diurnality

Either diurnal (daytime) or nocturnal (nighttime)

Almost all diurnal

Olfaction

Strong sense of smell

Weaker sense of smell

Opposable Digits

Some have opposable thumbs and big toes

All have opposable thumbs; Most have opposable big toes

Introduction

Answer these questions from the opening segment of the video.

  1. Describe what is unique about primates in regard to these characteristics:

    1. Hands –

    1. Eyes –

    1. Intelligence –

    1. Social Interactions –

    1. Memory

Hamadryas Baboons

  1. Are these baboons prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. Describe the social hierarchy of these baboons.

  1. What is the cause of the conflict between the two troops of baboons?

Japanese Macaque “Snow Monkeys”

  1. Are these macaques prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. These animals are the most northernly-living monkeys. How are they built differently than other monkeys to survive the harsh winters of the Japanese Alps?

  1. Describe the social hierarchy of these macaques and how it relates to the hot springs.

Western Gorilla

Gorilla gorilla

  1. Are gorillas prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. Describe the social hierarchy of these gorillas.

  1. Would these gorillas be considered herbivores, carnivores, or omnivores?

  1. How does the silverback male gorilla communicate his territory to other gorillas?

Spectral Tarsier

Tarsius tarsier

  1. Are tarsiers prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. Tarsiers are completely carnivorous. What is their food source?

  1. The tarsiers have three sets of adaptations that enable them to be successful nocturnal hunters. Describe the adaptations tarsiers have in each of these body parts:

    1. Eyeballs:

    1. Ears:

    1. Legs:

  1. How do the tarsiers communicate with each other? What reasons do they have to communicate?

  1. The Lar Gibbons also communicate, but for a different reason. Explain what.

Phayre’s Leaf Monkeys

Trachypithecus phayrei

  1. Are the leaf monkeys prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. Why are the baby leaf monkeys a bright orange color?

  1. Describe the social system of leaf monkeys, especially in relation to caring for babies.

Ring-Tailed lemur

Lemur catta

  1. Are the lemurs prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. Explain how male and female ring-tailed lemurs use scent markers as a means of communication.

  1. How do males compete for the opportunity to mate?

Orangutan

Pongo borneo

  1. Are the Orangutans prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. How long do Orangutans raise their young? Is this unusual?

  1. What skills does the mother teach her child before it reaches adulthood?

Chacma baboons

Papio ursinus

  1. Are the baboons prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. Why is gathering food such a challenge for Chacma baboons?

  1. What unusual food source do the baboons eat, and where do they find it?

  1. What physical adaptations to the baboons have that allows them to eat mussels?

White-faced Capuchins

Cebus capucinus

  1. Are the capuchins prosimians or anthropoids?





  1. If capuchin monkeys are not strong enough to open clams, how do they eat them?

  1. What do brown-tufted capuchins do differently? Explain why this is considered a more advanced skill.

Chimpanzees

Pan troglodytes

  1. Are the chimpanzees prosimians or anthropoids?

  1. Describe two examples of how the chimpanzees use tools.

  1. Describe the skill of nut-cracking. Why is this considered a more advanced skill than the capuchins?

  1. What unusual social characteristics do chimpanzees exhibit?

Classification

Primates are an order of mammals; one that the human species falls within. The order is divided into different families based on characteristics such as presence of a prehensile tail, opposable thumb, whether they are ground-dwelling or tree-dwelling.


Order Chiroptera

“Adapted for Flight”

Order Perissodactyla

“Odd-Toed Hooved”

Order Primates

“Opposable Thumbs”

Rodentia

“Gnawing Hervivores”

Hyracoidea

“Short legs and tail”

Tubulidentata

“Tube-Toothed”

Order Marsupialia

“Pouched”

Order Eulipotyphla

“Insectivores with Snouts”

Lemurs

“Prosimians of Madagascar”



Tarsiers

“Big Eyes”


Lemur


Tarsier


Order Primates

Class Mammalia



Old World Monkeys

“Non-Prehensile Tail”




New World Monkeys

“Prehensile Tail”



Gibbons

“Long Arms”



Gibbon


Orangutans

“Person of the Forest”


Orangutan

Chimpanzees and Bonobos
“Closest to Humans”

Humans

“Man”

Gorillas

“The Largest Primates”


Lemurs

Tarsiers

Old World Monkeys

New World Monkeys

Gibbons

Orangutans

Gorillas

Chimpanzees

Humans

IUCN Red list Status

Hamadryas Baboon

Japanese Macaque

Western Gorilla

Spectral Tarsier

Lar Gibbon

Owl Monkey

Ring-Tailed Lemur

Orangutan

Chacma Baboon

White-Faced Capuchin

Chimpanzee

Mark which category the primate is found and then look up their endangered status on the IUCN red list and provide details.

Adapted by Jill Pfeiffer from James Dauray http://www.aurumscience.com/life.html Page 0