| Literature DB >> 32652341 |
Laurent Marivaux1, Walter Aguirre-Diaz2, Aldo Benites-Palomino3, Guillaume Billet4, Myriam Boivin5, François Pujos6, Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi7, Julia V Tejada-Lara8, Rafael M Varas-Malca2, Pierre-Olivier Antoine9.
Abstract
The Honda Group of La Venta, Colombia, has yielded a wide array of crown platyrrhine primates, documenting the late Middle Miocene epoch (ca. 13.1-12.6 Ma, Laventan South American Land Mammal Age). Although exceptional, this record represents only a snapshot of the evolutionary history of New World monkeys because virtually none of the primate taxa recorded at La Venta had so far been found elsewhere. We describe here few dental remains of a cebine platyrrhine discovered from Laventan deposits in the San Martín Department of Peru (Peruvian Amazonia). The primate dental specimens from that new fossil-bearing locality (TAR-31) are strongly reminiscent morphologically of the teeth of Neosaimiri fieldsi from La Venta. However, given that several aspects of the dental variability from TAR-31 are unknown, we prefer to provide an assignment with open nomenclature (i.e., N. cf. fieldsi), instead of formally referring these remains to N. fieldsi, pending the discovery of additional specimens. The occurrence of Neosaimiri in Peru, in coeval deposits of La Venta, thus represents a second and southernmost record of that low-latitude genus in the Neotropics, thereby demonstrating its wide distribution along the northwestern edge of the Pebas Mega-Wetland System, in tropical western South America.Entities:
Keywords: Laventan; Neogene; Paleobiogeography; Peru; Primates; Tropical South America
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32652341 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hum Evol ISSN: 0047-2484 Impact factor: 3.895