Weird
evolution revealed in now-extinct monkey which inhabited Jamaica until a few
hundred years ago
Date: November 12, 2018
Source: Zoological Society of London
Analysis of
ancient DNA of a mysterious extinct monkey named Xenothrix -- which displays
bizarre body characteristics very different to any living monkey -- has
revealed that it was in fact most closely related to South America's titi monkeys
(Callicebinae). Having made their way overwater to Jamaica, probably on
floating vegetation, their bones reveal they subsequently underwent remarkable
evolutionary change.
The research
published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (12
November 2018) and carried out by a team of experts from international
conservation charity ZSL (Zoological Society of London), London's Natural
History Museum (NHM), and the American Museum of Natural History in New York,
also reveals that monkeys must have colonised the Caribbean islands more than
once. The study reports an incredible discovery of how the unusual ecology of
islands can dramatically influence animal evolution.
Xenothrix,
unlike any other monkey in the world, was a slow-moving tree-dweller with
relatively few teeth, and leg bones somewhat like a rodent's. Its unusual
appearance has made it difficult for scientists to work out what it was related
to and how it evolved. However, the scientific team have successfully extracted
the first ever ancient DNA from an extinct Caribbean primate -- uncovered from
bones excavated in a Jamaican cave and providing important new evolutionary
insights.
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