Flashcards for Primates
Topics 7-8:  Apes and Humans
(27 cards)

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The superfamily to which all apes and humans belong.

Hominoidea (hominoids)

The family of hominoids in which orangutans belong.

Hominidae (hominids)

The family of hominoids in which gibbons and siamangs belong.

Hylobatidae

The family of hominoids in which gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos belong.

Hominidae (hominids)

The family of hominoids in which humans belong.

Hominidae (hominids)

The names of the “great apes.” These are the largest apes.

orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos

The names of the “lesser apes.” These are the smallest apes.

gibbons
The names of the Asian ape species.
orangutans and gibbons
The names of the African ape species.
gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos

The term for having only one mate at a time. This is rare among nonhuman primates in general though it is common for gibbons and siamangs.

monogamy

The form of locomotion in which an animal travels through the trees by swinging under branches with a hand over hand motion rather than running along the top. The smaller apes and some New World monkeys do this.

brachiation (suspensory climbing)

The term for the type of family consisting of an adult male and female mating pair along with their children.

nuclear family

The names of the ape species in which adults regularly defend their territory against others with piercingly loud whooping and hooting vocalizations.

gibbons

The largest and most endangered Asian apes.

orangutans

The largest African apes. They are also the largest primate species alive today.

gorillas

The best brachiators among the apes. Up to 90% of their locomotion is by this means.

gibbons
The least sexually dimorphic apes.
gibbons
The apes that are knuckle walkers.
gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos

The only nonhuman primate that regularly engages in sexual intercourse face to face. Both heterosexual and homosexual intercourse are also common for this species. Copulation occurs frequently as a means of reducing tension in their communities and has become recreational for them.

bonobos

The rarest of the 3 gorilla varieties or subspecies.

mountain gorillas

The African apes that hunt other animals for food—about 10% of their diet consists of meat.

chimpanzees

The most biologically successful of all apes in terms of the extent of their geographic range and the size of their total population today.

chimpanzees

The genus and species of all living humans today.

Homo sapiens

The apes that humans are the most similar to in terms of our anatomy and the closest to in our evolutionary past.

African apes, especially the chimpanzees and bonobos

The primate species that has the most varied and complex social organizations. They are also the only primates to create and use symbols as a means of communication.

humans

The only primate species whose feet no longer have the ability to effectively grasp and manipulate objects.

humans

The most biologically successful of all primates in terms of the extent of their geographic range and the size of their total population today.

humans