Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, P. O. Box 90383, Biological Sciences Building, 130 Science Drive, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Department of Anatomical Sciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2018 Sep;122:1-22. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2018.03.010. Epub 2018 Jun 20.
Euprimates are unusual among mammals in having fingers and toes with flat nails. While it seems clear that the ancestral stock from which euprimates evolved had claw-bearing digits, the available fossil record has not yet contributed a detailed understanding of the transition from claws to nails. This study helps clarify the evolutionary history of the second pedal digit with fossils representing the distal phalanx of digit two (dpII), and has broader implications for other digits. Among extant primates, the keratinized structure on the pedal dpII widely varies in form. Extant strepsirrhines and tarsiers have narrow, distally tapering, dorsally inclined nails (termed a 'grooming claws' for their use in autogrooming), while extant anthropoids have more typical nails that are wider and lack distal tapering or dorsal inclination. At least two fossil primate species thought to be stem members of the Strepsirrhini appear to have had grooming claws, yet reconstructions of the ancestral euprimate condition based on direct evidence from the fossil record are ambiguous due to inadequate fossil evidence for the earliest haplorhines. Seven recently discovered, isolated distal phalanges from four early Eocene localities in Wyoming (USA) closely resemble those of the pedal dpII in extant prosimians. On the basis of faunal associations, size, and morphology, these specimens are recognized as the grooming phalanges of five genera of haplorhine primates, including one of the oldest known euprimates (∼56 Ma), Teilhardina brandti. Both the phylogenetic distribution and antiquity of primate grooming phalanges now strongly suggest that ancestral euprimates had grooming claws, that these structures were modified from a primitive claw rather than a flat nail, and that the evolutionary loss of 'grooming claws' represents an apomorphy for crown anthropoids.
真灵长类动物在拥有扁平指甲的手指和脚趾方面与哺乳动物不同。虽然似乎很清楚,真灵长类动物进化的祖先拥有带爪的指(趾),但现有化石记录尚未对从爪到指甲的过渡提供详细的了解。这项研究有助于澄清代表第二跖骨远端指节(dpII)的化石所代表的第二跖骨的进化历史,并对其他指(趾)具有更广泛的意义。在现存的灵长类动物中,广泛存在形式多样的角质化结构的跖骨 dpII。现存的跗猴和眼镜猴具有狭窄、远端渐细、背侧倾斜的指甲(因其在自我修饰中的用途而被称为“修饰爪”),而现存的类人猿具有更典型的指甲,它们更宽,缺乏远端渐细或背侧倾斜。至少有两种被认为是跗猴谱系成员的化石灵长类动物似乎具有修饰爪,但由于对最早的简鼻猴的化石证据不足,基于对最早的简鼻猴的化石记录的直接证据,对祖先真灵长类动物的重建是模棱两可的。最近在怀俄明州(美国)的四个早始新世地点发现了七个孤立的远端指节,它们与现生贫齿类的跖骨 dpII 非常相似。基于动物群的联系、大小和形态,这些标本被认为是五个简鼻猴类属的修饰指节,其中包括最古老的已知真灵长类动物之一(约 5600 万年前), Teilhardina brandti。灵长类动物的修饰指节的系统发育分布和古老性现在强烈表明,祖先真灵长类动物具有修饰爪,这些结构是从原始的爪状结构而不是扁平的指甲演变而来的,而“修饰爪”的进化缺失代表了冠类人猿的一个特征。