Reassessment of the phylogenetic relationships of the late Miocene apes Hispanopithecus and Rudapithecus based on vestibular morphology

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Urciuoli, Alessandro
Zanolli, Clement
Almecija, Sergio
Beaudet, Amelie
Dumoncel, Jean
Morimoto, Naoki
Nakatsukasa, Masato
Moya-Sola, Salvador
Begun, David R.
Alba, David M.

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National Academy of Sciences

Abstract

Late Miocene great apes are key to reconstructing the ancestral morphotype from which earliest hominins evolved. Despite consensus that the late Miocene dryopith great apes Hispanopithecus laietanus (Spain) and Rudapithecus hungaricus (Hungary) are closely related (Hominidae), ongoing debate on their phylogenetic relationships with extant apes (stem hominids, hominines, or pongines) complicates our understanding of great ape and human evolution. To clarify this question, we rely on the morphology of the inner ear semicircular canals, which has been shown to be phylogenetically informative. Based on microcomputed tomography scans, we describe the vestibular morphology of Hispanopithecus and Rudapithecus, and compare them with extant hominoids using landmark-free deformation-based three-dimensional geometric morphometric analyses. We also provide critical evidence about the evolutionary patterns of the vestibular apparatus in living and fossil hominoids under different phylogenetic assumptions for dryopiths. Our results are consistent with the distinction of Rudapithecus and Hispanopithecus at the genus rank, and further support their allocation to the Hominidae based on their derived semicircular canal volumetric proportions. Compared with extant hominids, the vestibular morphology of Hispanopithecus and Rudapithecus most closely resembles that of African apes, and differs from the derived condition of orangutans. However, the vestibular morphologies reconstructed for the last common ancestors of dryopiths, crown hominines, and crown hominids are very similar, indicating that hominines are plesiomorphic in this regard. Therefore, our results do not conclusively favor a hominine or stem hominid status for the investigated dryopiths.

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DATA AVAILABITY : The 3D mesh data have been deposited in MorphoSource, https://morphosource.org/ (Rudapithecus hungaricus: RUD:77 R: https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M126214; RUD:77 L: https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M126215; RUD:200: https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M126216; Hispanopithecus laietanus: IPS:18000: https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M126217; Nacholapithecus kerioi: KNM:BG:42744: https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M166427; Oreopithecus bambolii: NMB:BAC:208: https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M166428).

Keywords

Inner ear, Semicircular canals, Evolution, Fossil apes, Hominidae

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Citation

Urciuoli, A., Zanolli, C., Almécija, S. et al. 2021, 'Reassessment of the phylogenetic relationships of the late Miocene apes Hispanopithecus and Rudapithecus based on vestibular morphology ', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 118, no. 5, art. e2015215118, pp. 1-12, doi : 10.1073/pnas.2015215118.