- of the
Strepsirrhini ("moist-nosed"). The name is
sometimes spelled Haplorrhini. The
simians include catarrhines (Old
World monkeys and apes, including...
-
divided into two suborders:
Haplorrhini and Strepsirrhini. The
suborders are
further subdivided into
clades and families.
Haplorrhini contains nine families...
- Primatomorpha,
Ferae Order Primates,
Procolophonomorpha Suborder sub, 'under'
Haplorrhini,
Procolophonia Infraorder infra, 'below' Simiiformes,
Hallucicrania Parvorder...
-
Primates Suborder Strepsirrhini: lemurs, lorises, galagos, etc.
Suborder Haplorrhini:
tarsiers + monkeys,
including apes
Infraorder Tarsiiformes: tarsiers...
- Xanthonycticebus,
pygmy slow
loris Family Galagidae:
galagos Suborder Haplorrhini: tarsiers,
monkeys and apes
Lorisids have a close,
woolly fur, which...
- ****umed but
qualify as a stem "missing link"
between Strepsirrhini and
Haplorrhini. However,
subsequent analysis on the
Darwinius fossil by Erik Seiffert...
-
Diptera Primates Fabales Agaricales Enterobacterales Suborder Brachycera Haplorrhini Fabineae Agaricineae Family Drosophilidae Hominidae Fabaceae Amanitaceae...
-
Primates (†Plesiadapiformes, Strepsirrhini,
Haplorrhini)...
- L-gulonolactone
oxidase (which is
nonfunctional in
humans and
other Haplorrhini primates; see
Unitary pseudogenes) and the
cofactor FAD+. This reaction...
-
argue the
debate is
conclusively settled in
favor of a
monophyletic Haplorrhini. In
common with simians,
tarsiers have a
mutation in the L-gulonolactone...