Successive radiations, not stasis, in the South American primate fauna
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-05, 11:25authored byJason A Hodgson, Kirstin N Sterner, Luke J Matthews, Andrew S Burrell, Rachana A Jani, Ryan L Raaum, Caro-Beth Stewart, Todd R Disotell
The earliest Neotropical primate fossils complete enough for taxonomic assessment,
Dolichocebus
,
Tremacebus
, and
Chilecebus
, date to approximately 20 Ma. These have been interpreted as either closely related to extant forms or as extinct stem lineages. The former hypothesis of morphological stasis requires most living platyrrhine genera to have diverged before 20 Ma. To test this hypothesis, we collected new complete mitochondrial genomes from
Aotus lemurinus
,
Saimiri sciureus
,
Saguinus oedipus
,
Ateles belzebuth
, and
Callicebus donacophilus.
We combined these with published sequences from
Cebus albifrons
and other primates to infer the mitochondrial phylogeny. We found support for a cebid/atelid clade to the exclusion of the pitheciids. Then, using Bayesian methods and well-supported fossil calibration constraints, we estimated that the platyrrhine most recent common ancestor (MRCA) dates to 19.5 Ma, with all major lineages diverging by 14.3 Ma. Next, we estimated catarrhine divergence dates on the basis of platyrrhine divergence scenarios and found that only a platyrrhine MRCA less than 21 Ma is concordant with the catarrhine fossil record. Finally, we calculated that 33% more change in the rate of evolution is required for platyrrhine divergences consistent with the morphologic stasis hypothesis than for a more recent radiation. We conclude that
Dolichocebus
,
Tremacebus
, and
Chilecebus
are likely too old to be crown platyrrhines, suggesting they were part of an extinct early radiation. We note that the crown platyrrhine radiation was concomitant with the radiation of 2 South American xenarthran lineages and follows a global temperature peak and tectonic activity in the Andes.