A new fossil cebine from hispaniola
- 1 August 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Physical Anthropology
- Vol. 58 (4) , 419-436
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330580410
Abstract
An incomplete mandibular fragment of a cebine monkey from an early Holocene Haitian cave deposit adds to the small but growing list of fossil Antillean primates. The jaw is of the correct size to belong to the same taxon as the partial maxilla of “Saimiri” bernensis from the Dominican Republic. Both finds probably represent a single species whose proximate ancestry lay closer to Cebus than to Saimiri, although more evidence will be required to substantiate this. No close relationship of the Hispaniolan fossils to the Jamaican platyrrhine Xenothrix is indicated. How monkeys managed to penetrate the West Indies is a biogeographical puzzle of the first order. Geographical vicariance events, island-hopping, and purposeful or inadvertent introduction by humans seem rather implausible devices. On the whole, long-distance, over-water rafting from the Americas remains the most likely mechanism for past land vertebrate immigration into the Caribbean.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Endemism in the Australian floraJournal of Biogeography, 2001
- An Appraisal of the Vicariance Hypothesis of Caribbean Biogeography and Its Application to West Indian Terrestrial VertebratesSystematic Zoology, 1981
- Green anole in Dominican amberNature, 1980
- Rafting Mammals or Drifting Islands?: Biogeography of the Greater Antillean Insectivores Nesophontes and SolenodonJournal of Biogeography, 1980
- Xenothrix and ceboid phylogenyJournal of Human Evolution, 1977
- The fossil record and primate phylogenyJournal of Human Evolution, 1977
- Island Biology Illustrated by the Land Birds of Jamaica.Systematic Botany, 1976
- A Vicariance Model of Caribbean BiogeographySystematic Zoology, 1975
- The Origin of the Fauna of the Greater Antilles, with Discussion of Dispersal of Animals Over Water and Through the AirThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1938
- AN EXTINCT OCTODONT FROM THE ISLAND OF PORTO RICO, WEST INDIESAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1916