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Pongidae

Obsolete ape taxon


Obsolete ape taxon

  • Pongo
  • Pan Pongidae , or the pongids is an obsolete primate taxon containing chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans. By this definition pongids were also called "great apes". This taxon is not used today but is of historical significance. The great apes are currently classified as Hominidae. This entry addresses the old usage of pongid.

The words "Pongidae" and "pongids" are sometimes used informally for the primate taxon containing orangutans and their extinct fossil relations. For this usage the currently most widely accepted name is Ponginae (or informally Asian hominids or pongines), the orangutan subfamily of the Hominidae or hominids. In current hominid taxonomy there is no “pongid” taxon. The orangutan taxon is now known to be paraphyletic to other (African) hominids. The orangutans are the only surviving species of the subfamily Ponginae, which genetically diverged from the other hominids (gorillas, chimpanzees and humans) between 19.3 and 15.7 million years ago. The subfamilies split somewhat later. The corresponding crown group for this taxon is Hominidae.

Distinction of great apes (formerly pongids) to hominins

Great apes (formerly pongids)HumansHumans are the only extant Homininans.
Mode of locomotionKnuckle walking, arboreal
Location of foramen magnumBack of the skull
Skull (viewed from top)pear-shaped
Widest part of skull viewed from behindParietal region
PalateRectangular
Body growthFast
PhalangesCurved

Skull

The great ape (formerly pongid) skull contains the following features that are absent or less pronounced in humans:

  • a sulcus behind the brow ridges
  • prognathism
  • a protruding occipital region
  • large, bony eye sockets
  • a large nasal opening
  • constriction just behind the orbital region
  • stout facial bones
  • a diastema
  • a simian shelf
  • a larger, well pronounced brow ridge

Adaptations for locomotion

The following great ape (formerly Pongid) adaptations are for arboreal and knuckle walking locomotion and are not found in humans:

Great ape (formerly pongid}Human
Arms are longer than the legsArms are shorter than the legs
Scapula has an orientation for supporting the body weight beneath the armsScapula is oriented for holding the arms by the side
Digits are long and curved for grasping branchesDigits are shorter and straight
Pelvis is shaped to support the legs and trunk in the bent-over posturePelvis is shaped to support the legs and trunk in a vertical position
Knees do not lock the legsKnees lock the legs straight to minimize the expenditure of energy when standing
Pelvis is relatively largePelvis is much shorter and bowl-shaped
Iliac pillar is elongatedThe iliac crest is oriented more to the side and slanted

Similarity to hominins

The australopithecines show intermediate character states between great apes (formerly pongids) and humans, with Homo erectus (formerly Pithecanthropus) intermediate between australopithecines and humans. Members of the genus Homo share many key features with anatomically modern man.

References

Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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