Abstract

BackgroundThe two main primate groups recorded throughout the European Miocene, hominoids and pliopithecoids, seldom co-occur. Due to both their rarity and insufficiently understood palaeoecology, it is currently unclear whether the infrequent co-occurrence of these groups is due to sampling bias or reflects different ecological preferences. Here we rely on the densely sampled primate-bearing sequence of Abocador de Can Mata (ACM) in Spain to test whether turnovers in primate assemblages are correlated with palaeoenvironmental changes. We reconstruct dietary evolution through time (ca. 12.6–11.4 Ma), and hence climate and habitat, using tooth-wear patterns and carbon and oxygen isotope compositions of enamel of the ubiquitous musk-deer Micromeryx.ResultsOur results reveal that primate species composition is strongly correlated with distinct environmental phases. Large-bodied hominoids (dryopithecines) are recorded in humid, densely-forested environments on the lowermost portion of the ACM sequence. In contrast, pliopithecoids inhabited less humid, patchy ecosystems, being replaced by dryopithecines and the small-bodied Pliobates toward the top of the series in gallery forests embedded in mosaic environments.ConclusionsThese results support the view that pliopithecoid primates preferred less humid habitats than hominoids, and reveal that differences in behavioural ecology were the main factor underpinning their rare co-occurrence during the European Miocene. Our findings further support that ACM hominoids, like Miocene apes as a whole, inhabited more seasonal environments than extant apes. Finally, this study highlights the importance of high-resolution, local investigations to complement larger-scale analyses and illustrates that continuous and densely sampled fossiliferous sequences are essential for deciphering the complex interplay between biotic and abiotic factors that shaped past diversity.

Highlights

  • The two main primate groups recorded throughout the European Miocene, hominoids and pliopithecoids, seldom co-occur

  • Initially a single species of Micromeryx was reported from Abocador de Can Mata (ACM) [15], the currently available dental material indicates the presence of three different morphotypes that likely represent different species (Additional file 1: Supplementary information, Note 1)

  • For the chi-square test, the results show that Micromeryx morphotype 1 is different from morphotype 2 (p = 0.0283), whereas non-significant differences are between morphotypes 2 and 3 (p = 0.2255) and between morphotypes 1 and 3 (p = 0.2019)

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Summary

Introduction

The two main primate groups recorded throughout the European Miocene, hominoids and pliopithecoids, seldom co-occur. 8.5 Ma, late Miocene), two main groups are recorded there: pliopithecoids, generally considered a Eurasian clade of stem catarrhines (i.e. preceding the cercopithecoid-hominoid split [7]), and hominoids (crown catarrhines more closely related to extant apes and humans than to cercopithecoids [8,9,10]). Both groups presumably dispersed from Africa to Eurasia following the closure of the Tethys Seaway during the late middle Miocene and subsequently diversified across the continent giving rise to multiple genera and species. European hominoids are generally larger than pliopithecoids and considered great apes (hominids), except for the small-bodied Pliobates, interpreted as a stem hominoid [11]

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