-
Haplorhini (/hæpləˈraɪnaɪ/), the
haplorhines (Gr**** for "simple-nosed") or the "dry-nosed"
primates is a
suborder of
primates containing the
tarsiers and...
-
strepsirrhine dated to 47
million years (early Eocene) The
earliest haplorrhine primates from the
fossil record are the omomyids,
which resembled modern...
- clade, is
basal to the hominoids/ape clade. In this example, both
Haplorrhine as
prosimians should be
considered as most
basal groupings. It is better...
- communication.
Lemurs have long
snouts (compared to the
short snouts of
haplorrhines) that are
traditionally thought to
position the nose for
better sifting...
-
family is that of the
tarsier (Tarsiidae),
branched off from the
other haplorrhines.
Since tarsiers also
cannot make
vitamin C, this
implies the mutation...
- the wet,
naked surface around the
nostrils in most mammals,
absent in
haplorrhine primates such as
humans "7.2 the Skull".
Anatomy and
Physiology - The...
-
arboreal locomotion seen most
commonly among the
strepsirrhine primates and
haplorrhine tarsiers. The
animal begins at rest with its
torso upright and elbows...
- have a more
acute sense of smell, and the loss of the
rhinarium in the
haplorrhine primates is
related to
their decreased reliance on olfaction,
being ****ociated...
-
contain most prosimians;
modern examples include lemurs and lorises. The
haplorrhines include the two
living groups:
prosimian tarsiers, and
simian monkeys...
-
wastebasket taxa for "lower primates". Regardless, the
strepsirrhine and
haplorrhine clades are
generally accepted and
viewed as the
preferred taxonomic division...