''Adapis'' is an extinct adapiform primate from the
Eocene of Europe.
While this genus has traditionally contained five species (''A. magnus, A. bruni, A. collinsonae, A. parisiensis,'' and ''A. sudrei''), recent research has recognized at least six
morphotypes that may represent distinct species.
[ ''Adapis'' holds the title of the first Eocene primate ever discovered. In 1821, ]Georges Cuvier
Jean Léopold Nicolas Frédéric, Baron Cuvier (; 23 August 1769 – 13 May 1832), known as Georges Cuvier, was a French natural history, naturalist and zoology, zoologist, sometimes referred to as the "founding father of paleontology". Cuvier ...
, who is considered to be the founding father of paleontology, discovered ''Adapis'' in fissure fillings outside of Paris, France.[ Given it's timing and appearance in the fossil record, Cuvier did not recognize the primate affinities of ''Adapis'' and first described it as a small extinct ]pachyderm
Pachyderm may refer to:
* Any of the Pachydermata, an obsolete 19th-century taxonomic order of mammals that included elephants, rhinoceroses, tapirs and hippopotami.
* Pachyderm Studios, a recording studio in Cannon Falls, Minnesota.
* Pachyderma ...
; only later in the 19th century was ''Adapis'' identified as a primate.[
]
Anatomy
''Adapis'' is considered a sexually dimorphic primate, in which males are generally larger in size than females; for example, one study found that compared to females, adult males of ''Adapis'' are 44%-56% larger in body weight, have 13-16% longer crania, and 13%-19% larger in canines.[ Moreover, males of this genus have relatively broader skulls with more prominent nuchal and ]sagittal crest
A sagittal crest is a ridge of bone running lengthwise along the midline of the top of the skull (at the sagittal suture) of many mammalian and reptilian skulls, among others. The presence of this ridge of bone indicates that there are exceptiona ...
s.[ Interestingly, the canine dimorphism in ''Adapis'' is distinct from the form of canine dimorphism exhibited in '']Notharctus
''Notharctus'' ("false bear", from the Ancient Greek nothos (νόθος), "illegitimate", and arktos (ἄρκτος), "bear") is a genus of adapiform primate that lived in North America and Europe during the late to middle Eocene.
The body form ...
'', another adapiform genus found in the Eocene of North America.[ The fossil crania of ''Adapis'' exhibit relatively small orbits which suggests a diurnal activity pattern for the genus.][ They also possess a tall sagittal crest and a strong postorbital constriction of the braincase in order to support massive temporalis muscles that facilitated powerful chewing. The dental anatomy of ''Adapis'' is characterized by dominant buccal shearing crests adapted for a folivorous and partially frugivorous diet.][ The postcranial anatomy of ''Adapis'' suggests the taxon was adapted for climbing rather than leaping. For example, the femur shares many features in common with pottos and lorises, but not lemurs.][ ''Adapis'' also has a very short astragalar neck and abbreviated distal elongation of the ]calcaneus
In humans and many other primates, the calcaneus (; from the Latin ''calcaneus'' or ''calcaneum'', meaning heel) or heel bone is a bone of the tarsus of the foot which constitutes the heel. In some other animals, it is the point of the hock.
S ...
. The ankle morphology of ''Adapis'' differs from that of notharctid taxa in its abbreviated astragalar neck and reduced distal aspect of the calcaneus. These features are also consistent with climbing instead of leaping.[
]
Taxonomic diversity
''Adapis'' belongs to the family Adapidae.[ While there is debate regarding the number of species of ''Adapis'', the morphological variation in the humeri of ''Adapis'' suggests anywhere from four to six species could be represented in the genus. Traditionally, five species of ''Adapis'' have been recognized, including ''A. magnus'', ''A. bruni'', ''A. collinsonae'', ''A. parisiensis'', and ''A. sudrei''. Recent research showed that some fossil humeri of ''Adapis'' exhibit morphology that is comparable to living active arboreal quadrupeds.][ The evolutionary lineage from ''Adapis magnus'' to ''Adapis parisiensis'' exhibits reduced body size and canine size.][
]
Geographic and temporal range
''Adapis'' was first discovered in southern France.[ Fossils are known from the early Eocene,][ to the early ]Oligocene
The Oligocene ( ) is a geologic epoch of the Paleogene Period and extends from about 33.9 million to 23 million years before the present ( to ). As with other older geologic periods, the rock beds that define the epoch are well identified but the ...
. The extinction of ''Adapis'' at the Eocoene-Oligiocene boundary has been considered to be the result of dramatic global cooling and drying.[ While North American and European adapiforms did not have access to geographic refuge to evade the cooler and drier conditions in the Northern latitudes, adapiforms in Asia were able to retreat to southern geographic regions that did not experience severe cooling and drying, enabling their survival until the Miocene.][
]
History of discovery
The genus was first found and named by Georges Cuvier in 1821. This was the first Eocene primate ever discovered but was first mistakenly identified as an extinct genus of pachyderms. The true identity was not discovered until the 1870s where entire skulls were found in the Quercy region in southern France.[ ''Adapis'' and close relatives were also found in many fissure fillings in southern France.][
]
Etymology and Naming
One etymology suggests that the word is derived from el, α , 'without' and el, δάπις 'carpet', a reference to the assumed texture of its skin as it was considered a pachyderm. However, since Pachydermata was first described in the eighteenth century, and 'adapis' was in use as a vernacular name for the hyrax during the sixteenth century, this etymology may be anachronistic. The more plausible etymology, which is referenced by Cuvier himself, is that, since he believed that the remains from the Paris region belonged to an extinct genus of pachyderms, he adopted ''Adapis'', a non-scientific name that was "sometimes used for the Hyrax
Hyraxes (), also called dassies, are small, thickset, herbivorous mammals in the order Hyracoidea. Hyraxes are well-furred, rotund animals with short tails. Typically, they measure between long and weigh between . They are superficially simil ...
", which he considered related to ''Adapis''.[Cuvier, G.B., ''Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles'', Vol. 3, 1822, p. 265]
footnote
/ref> Cuvier's source for the informal name was Conrad Gesner, ''Historiae animalium'', I (Zurich, 1551), chapter on rabbits
p. 395
Gesner himself believed that both ''adapis'' and the Aramaic word from which he thought it was derived actually referred to the common rabbit.
Paleobiology
While the average body weight of ''Adapis'' is estimated to be about 2.0 kg, the genus is represented by an extremely wide range of body size across species compared to other adapiform genera. ''A. parisiensis'' appears to have been a medium-sized (compared to the large-bodied ''A. magnus'' with an estimated body mass of 8.4-9.0 kg),[ visually oriented, diurnal, sexually dimorphic arboreal folivore.][ Examinations of the dental microwear reveal striations on molar wear facets ''A. magnus,'' which suggests complex, three-directional mandibular movement during mastication. ''Adapis'' has been interpreted as having a diurnal activity pattern due to its small orbits.][ While some species of ''Adapis'' were mainly folivores, other species subsited on a diet that included some fruit.][ Based on other anatomical features, ''Adapis'' is thought to have been a climber rather than a leaper,][ and most likely had slow to medium slow locomotion.][ Horizontal movement was also a possibly important means of locomotion.][ In comparison with living primates, many researchers have considered the body size dimorphism in ''Adapis'' as indicative of a polygynous mating system.][ However, other have interpreted the fossils ''A. parisiensis'' as indicative of monogamy, suggesting the taxon was predominately solitary with a small home range. Based on inner ear morphology, ''Adapis'' may have been more sensitive to high frequencies rather than low frequencies. This interpretation of inner-ear morphology has led some researchers to compare the social and activity behaviors of ''A. parisiensis'' to that of '' Perodicticus potto'' and '' Nycticebus coucang'', which are extant primates that are solitary, nocturnal, and monogamous. Moreover, this morphology lends to the hypothesis that ''A. parisiensis'' had a small home range with sensitivity to high frequencies that do not broadcast over long distances.][
]
References
{{Taxonbar, from=Q2278409
Prehistoric strepsirrhines
Eocene primates
Prehistoric primate genera
Fossil taxa described in 1822
Extinct mammals of Europe
Taxa named by Georges Cuvier