Abstract

During the last decade, new discoveries in several Iberian basins, together with the description of previously unpublished finds, have significantly increased the recorded paleodiversity of fossil Primates (Mammalia: Euarchonta) in the Iberian Peninsula. Here we provide an updated compendium of the primate fossil record in Iberia during the Cenozoic and further summarize the changes in primate paleo­diversity through time, which are then analyzed in the light of changing climatic conditions. Thanks to favorable climatic conditions, the highest diversity of Iberian primates was reached during the Eocene, thus reflecting the radiation of both adapoids and omomyoids; only a single plesiadapiform genus is in contrast recorded in the Iberian Peninsula. Near the Eocene-Oligocene boundary, paleoclimatic changes led to a primate diversity crisis and other faunal changes, although two Iberian omomyoids survived the Grande Coupure. From the Middle Miocene onwards, catarrhine primates are recorded in the Iberian Peninsula. During the Middle and Late Miocene, they are represented by pliopithecoids and hominoids, restricted to NE Iberia. The Miocene hominoids from Iberia are of utmost significance for understanding the Eurasian hominoid radiation and its role in the origins of the great-ape-and-human clade. Following the local extinction of these taxa during the early Late Miocene, due to progressively increased seasonality and concomitant changes in plant communities, cercopithecoids are also recorded in the Iberian Peninsula from the latest Miocene through the Plio-Pleistocene, although they finally became locally extinct, whereas hominoids are again represented by fossil humans during the Pleistocene.

Highlights

  • Primates (Mammalia: Euarchonta) are a eutherian order of moderate diversity, with about 300 extant species

  • Thanks to favorable climatic conditions, the highest diversity of Iberian primates was reached during the Eocene, reflecting the radiation of both adapoids and omomyoids; only a single plesiadapiform genus is in contrast recorded in the Iberian Peninsula

  • Following the local extinction of these taxa during the early Late Miocene, due to progressively increased seasonality and concomitant changes in plant communities, cercopithecoids are recorded in the Iberian Peninsula from the latest Miocene through the Plio-Pleistocene, they became locally extinct, whereas hominoids are again represented by fossil humans during the Pleistocene

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Summary

Primates

Primates (Mammalia: Euarchonta) are a eutherian order of moderate diversity, with about 300 extant species They were traditionally divided into two major groups: prosimians and simians (or anthropoids) (e.g., Fleagle, 1999). Crown primates (euprimates, or primates of modern aspect) constitute a monophyletic group including extant strepsirrhines and haplorrhines, together with the extinct taxa more closely related to either of them (see Fleagle, 1999, and Hartwig, 2002, for the most recent complete accounts on fossil primates). The primate total group includes crown primates plus the primate stem lineage, the latter being those taxa preceding the haplorrhine-strepsirrhine divergence, but being more closely related to them than to other euarchontans, i.e. scandentians (tree shrews) and dermopterans (flying lemurs). The phylogenetic relationships of plesiadapiforms with euprimates remain unresolved, but it seems currently likely that most of them constitute a paraphyletic assemblage of stem primates

Aims of this study
Systematic paleontology
Results
Discussion

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