Plesiadapis is one of the oldest known primate-like mammal genera which existed about 58–55 million years ago in North America and Europe. Plesiadapis means "near-Adapis", which is a reference to the Adapiformes primate of the Eocene, Adapis. Plesiadapis tricuspidens, the type specimen, is named after the three cusps present on its upper incisors.
This genus probably arose in North America and colonized Europe on a land bridge via Greenland. Thanks to the abundance of the genus and to its rapid evolution, species of Plesiadapis play an important role in the zonation of Late Paleocene continental sediments and in the correlation of faunas on both sides of the Atlantic. Two remarkable skeletons of Plesiadapis, one of them nearly complete, have been found in lake deposits at Menat, France. Although the preservation of the hard parts is poor, these skeletons still show remains of skin and hair as a carbonaceous film—something unique among Paleocene mammals. Details of the bones are better preserved in fossils from Cernay, also in France, where Plesiadapis is one of the most common mammals.
In 2013, a phylogenetic analysis that includes also the basal primate Archicebus positions Plesiadapis firmly outside of the Primates, as a sister group to both Primates and Dermoptera.
Nearly all of what is known about the anatomy of plesiadapiforms comes from fragmentary jaws and teeth, so most definitions of plesiadapiform genera and species are based on dentition. Plesiadapis' dentition shows a functional shift toward grinding and crushing in the cheek teeth as an adaptation towards increasing omnivory and herbivory.
The skull of Plesiadapis is relatively broad and flat, with a long snout with Rodent and teeth and long, gnawing incisors separated by a gap from its molars. Orbits are still directed to the side, unlike the forward-facing eyeballs of modern primates that enable three-dimensional vision. Plesiadapis had mobile limbs that terminated in strongly curved claws, and it sported a long bushy tail which is preserved in the Menat skeletons. The way of life of Plesiadapis has been much debated in the past. Climbing habits could be expected in a relative of the primates, but tree-dwelling animals are rarely found in such high numbers. Based on this and other evidence, some paleontologists have concluded that these animals were mainly living on the ground, like today's marmots and ground squirrels. However, more recent investigations have confirmed that the skeleton of Plesiadapis is that of an adept climber, which can be best compared to tree squirrels or to tree-dwelling marsupials such as possums. The short, robust limbs, the long, laterally compressed claws, and the long, bushy tail indicate that it was an arboreal quadruped. Remains found showed that it had a body mass of around .
Classification
P. tricuspidens (type species)
Gervais, 1877
Lemoin, 1887
Rütmeyer, 1891
Stehlin, 1916
Schlosser, 1921
P. intermedius
Gazin, 1971
Gazin, 1956
Gazin, 1956
Gingerich, 1974
Gingerich, 1974
P. simpsoni
Gazin, 1956
Gazin, 1956
Gazin, 1956
Gingerich, 1974
P. gidleyi
Matthew, 1917
Matthew, 1917
Teilhard, 1922
Gingerich, 1974
P. fodinatus
Jepsen, 1930
Gazin, 1942
Dorr, 1952
Gazin, 1956
P. dubius
Matthew, 1915
Matthew, 1915
Gazin, 1956
P. anceps
Simpson, 1936
Gazin, 1956
Gingerich, 1974
P. rex
Gidley, 1923
Gidley, 1923
Simpson, 1927
Russel, 1964
P. churchilli
Gingerich, 1974
Krishtalka, 1975
P. simonsi
Gingerich, 1974
P. cookei
Jepsen, 1930
P. insignis
Piton, 1940
Launay, 1908
Piton, 1940
P. walbeckensis
Russel, 1964
P. remensis
Lemoine, 1887
P. russelli
Gingerich, 1974
Teilhard, 1922
Russell, 1967
Anatomy and remains
External links
|
|