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Old World monkey
(redirected from Old World monkeys)

   Also found in: Acronyms, Wikipedia 0.02 sec.

Old World monkey

Any of some 100 species of monkeys (the catarrhine [“downward-nosed”] monkeys) that live in Africa, on the Red Sea coast of Arabia, and in Asia from Afghanistan to Indonesia. Catarrhines generally have a narrow nose, a narrow septum, close-set nostrils directed forward or down, bony ear passages, two premolars in each half of each jaw, a nonprehensile tail (if any), and hard patches of bare skin (ischial callosities) on the buttocks. Zoologists gather all Old World monkeys into a single family, Cercopithecidae. There are two subfamilies: Cercopithecinae, or monkeys with cheek pouches (macaques, baboons, vervets, mandrills, and others); and Colobinae, or leaf monkeys (langurs, colobus monkeys, proboscis monkeys, and others). See also New World monkey.



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He then reasoned that humans diverged from the Catarhine stock comprising of humans, anthropoid apes, and Old World monkeys, all having nostrils opening downward and close together and a nonprehensile, often greatly reduced or vestigial tail.
Simian T-cell lymphotropic viruses, enzootic in both Asian and African Old World monkeys and apes, may have repeatedly crossed the species barrier (7,8).
An ancestor of the howler monkeys had apparently matched the gene duplication that Old World monkeys experienced, yet the evolutionary force preserving the new opsin doesn't appear to have been an advantage in gathering fruit.
 
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