TY - JOUR
T1 - Mesopithecus pentelicus from Zhaotong, China, the easternmost representative of a widespread Miocene cercopithecoid species
AU - Jablonski, Nina G.
AU - Ji, Xueping
AU - Kelley, Jay
AU - Flynn, Lawrence J.
AU - Deng, Chenglong
AU - Su, Denise F.
N1 - Funding Information:
Fieldwork at Shuitangba and research on retrieved fossil materials and sediments were supported by grants from the United States National Science Foundation ( BCS-0321893 to F.C. Howell and T. White, BCS-1035897 to D.F.S. and N.G.J., BCS-1227964 to D.F.S., BCS-1227927 to N.G.J., and BCS-1227838 to J.K.). This study was also supported by grants from the College of Liberal Arts of The Pennsylvania State University and from Bryn Mawr College . We are grateful to Ji Yu for his expert preparation of the Mesopithecus fossils from Shuitangba and for making study casts. Christine Argot from the Muséum National de Histoire Naturelle in Paris is thanked for providing access to the collection of Mesopithecus pentelicus from Pikermi on repeated visits over a decade. George Chaplin is thanked generously for creating Figures 1 and 11 , for undertaking the original calculations of Mesopithecus dispersal rates, and for many discussions about the pelage characteristics of Asian colobines. We are grateful to Dionisios Youlatos who generously shared his preliminary manuscripts on the Shuitangba colobine calcaneus with us. Mauricio Antón created Figure 12 , with considerable input from George Chaplin, and is thanked for doing an expert job of reconciling many possible reconstructions of coat color and color pattern, posture, and locomotion. We are deeply grateful to Andrea Taylor, co-Editor of the Journal of Human Evolution, for her expert stewardship of the review process on this manuscript. Her efforts and those of Associate Editor, Eric Delson, and three anonymous reviewers helped us to significantly improve this manuscript. We thank Theresa Wilson foremost for her comprehensive support of the logistics of this project, from grant management to all aspects of manuscript production including creation of tables, maintaining of the bibliographic database, and formatting.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s)
PY - 2020/9
Y1 - 2020/9
N2 - A dentate mandible and proximal femur of Mesopithecus pentelicus Wagner, 1839 are described from the Shuitangba lignite mine in Zhaotong Prefecture, northeastern Yunnan Province, China. The remains were retrieved from sediments just below those that yielded a juvenile Lufengpithecus cranium and are dated at about ∼6.4 Ma. The mandible and proximal femur were found in close proximity and are probably of the same individual. The lower teeth are metrically and morphologically closely comparable with those of confirmed M. pentelicus from Europe, and on this basis, the specimen is assigned to this species. The anatomy of the proximal femur indicates that the Shuitangba Mesopithecus was a semiterrestrial quadruped that engaged in a range of mostly arboreal activities, including walking, climbing, and occasional leaping, with an abducted hip joint. The Shuitangba Mesopithecus is dentally typical for the genus but may have been more arboreal than previously described for M. pentelicus. M. pentelicus is well known from late Miocene (MN 11–12) sites in Europe and southwest Asia. Its estimated average rate of dispersal eastward was relatively slow, although it could have been episodically more rapid. The presence of a colobine, only slightly lower in the same section at Shuitangba that produced Lufengpithecus, is one of the only two well-documented instances of the near or actual co-occurrence of a monkey and ape in the Miocene of Eurasia. At Shuitangba, M. pentelicus occupied a freshwater-margin habitat with beavers, giant otters, swamp rabbits, and many aquatic birds. The presence of M. pentelicus in southwest China near the end of the Miocene further attests to the ecological versatility of a species long recognized as widespread and adaptable. The modern colobines of Asia, some or all of which are probable descendants of Mesopithecus, have gone on to inhabit some of the most highly seasonal and extreme habitats occupied by nonhuman primates.
AB - A dentate mandible and proximal femur of Mesopithecus pentelicus Wagner, 1839 are described from the Shuitangba lignite mine in Zhaotong Prefecture, northeastern Yunnan Province, China. The remains were retrieved from sediments just below those that yielded a juvenile Lufengpithecus cranium and are dated at about ∼6.4 Ma. The mandible and proximal femur were found in close proximity and are probably of the same individual. The lower teeth are metrically and morphologically closely comparable with those of confirmed M. pentelicus from Europe, and on this basis, the specimen is assigned to this species. The anatomy of the proximal femur indicates that the Shuitangba Mesopithecus was a semiterrestrial quadruped that engaged in a range of mostly arboreal activities, including walking, climbing, and occasional leaping, with an abducted hip joint. The Shuitangba Mesopithecus is dentally typical for the genus but may have been more arboreal than previously described for M. pentelicus. M. pentelicus is well known from late Miocene (MN 11–12) sites in Europe and southwest Asia. Its estimated average rate of dispersal eastward was relatively slow, although it could have been episodically more rapid. The presence of a colobine, only slightly lower in the same section at Shuitangba that produced Lufengpithecus, is one of the only two well-documented instances of the near or actual co-occurrence of a monkey and ape in the Miocene of Eurasia. At Shuitangba, M. pentelicus occupied a freshwater-margin habitat with beavers, giant otters, swamp rabbits, and many aquatic birds. The presence of M. pentelicus in southwest China near the end of the Miocene further attests to the ecological versatility of a species long recognized as widespread and adaptable. The modern colobines of Asia, some or all of which are probable descendants of Mesopithecus, have gone on to inhabit some of the most highly seasonal and extreme habitats occupied by nonhuman primates.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85089021736&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85089021736&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102851
DO - 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102851
M3 - Article
C2 - 32771770
AN - SCOPUS:85089021736
SN - 0047-2484
VL - 146
JO - Journal of Human Evolution
JF - Journal of Human Evolution
M1 - 102851
ER -