Why Are There No Native Monkeys in North America?

download Why Are There No Native Monkeys in North America?

of 3

Transcript of Why Are There No Native Monkeys in North America?

  • 7/30/2019 Why Are There No Native Monkeys in North America?

    1/3

    FYI: Why Are There No Native Monkeys In North America?If only they had developed monkey boats. Tiny little monkey boats! Oh man I wishthey had monkey boats.By Dan Nosowitz Posted 05.09.2013 at 2:30 pm 3 Comments

    Spider MonkeySquirrel Monkey The squirrel monkey, a New World monkey, would be pretty adorable to have perched on your white picket fence. Alas, it is not to be. Wikimedia Commons

    The infamous "Mystery Monkey of Tampa," an escaped rhesus macaque, was capturedback in October. The rhesus macaque is not a rare monkey; it's adapted to humansociety better than most, can survive on all kinds of foods, and can live in most any kind of hot-weather environment.

    And yet the Mystery Monkey captured the nation's attention. A monkey! On the loose! In Florida! So cool! And it got us wondering: why aren't there monkeys all over the United States? We've got tropical zones in the Florida Keys and the Caribbean, hot grasslands in the deep south, humid swamps in Louisiana and South Florida. And there are cold-weather monkeys too, for instance in northern Japan andthe Himalayas. What's the deal? Why don't we have any wild monkeys here?

    * * *

    I spoke to Dr. John Flynn, a paleontologist and expert on mammalian evolution atthe American Museum of Natural History, to find out why the US is stuck with lame squirrels and pigeons and stuff rather than cool monkeys. "In terms of modernprimates, that's a true observation," he said. "But 50 million years ago, therewere primates here." It turns out there are lots of reasons why the ancient primates that inhabited what is now the United States--and even Canada!--no longercall those areas home.

    Primates came to the New World (meaning North and South America) from, we think,Africa. As improbable as it sounds, scientists think early primates crossed theAtlantic Ocean and landed on the shores of both continents tens of millions ofyears ago, probably on some kind of vegetation raft. That's how most plants andanimals get to isolated islands--which the Americas were, at the time. Fossils h

    ave been recovered of early primates in Texas a whopping 43 million years ago, the oldest primate fossil ever found in North America. But the continents lookedvery different then, compared to now; most importantly, North and South Americawere completely different islands. The Isthmus of Panama, which we now refer toas Central America, didn't appear until much later, by which time the climate onboth Americas was very different from when the primates first landed there.

    When they did first land here, the climate was much warmer than it is now, and the primates evolved and diversified to take advantage of that.

    Early North American PrimateEarly North American Primate: An artist's rendering of Anaptomorphus homunculus,an early primate. Wikimedia Commons

    During the Eocene, lasting from 56 to 33.9 million years ago, the planet warmedto an incredible degree. We've found evidence of palm trees in Alaska from thatera. The entire planet, besides the very tips of the Arctic and Antarctic, was probably covered in rainforests, much of it tropical. For a monkey coming over from Africa, North America would have looked just great. Early primates thrived onboth continents, with no contact between them. In North America, there were twomain families of these primates: the omomyids and the adapids. There's some variation in size, behavior and diet, but in general, these were small, tarsier-like creatures with grasping hands and claws, large eyes, and bodies adapted to eat

  • 7/30/2019 Why Are There No Native Monkeys in North America?

    2/3

    fruits, leaves, and insects. There's a lot of debate about the modern-day relatives to these primates; some think they're strepsirrhines, the family includinglemurs, lorises, and bushbabies, but others think they're basal relatives of thetarsiers (which are primates, but not closely related to other monkeys).

    Then the planet began to cool, and cool quickly. Forests died out. The poles covered with ice. Many of the flora and fauna that had populated the planet duringthe Eocene just couldn't survive in the new, colder world. This event is calledthe Grande Coupure--occurring about 33.9 million years ago, it was a mass extinction of animals, in which most of the world's creatures (aside from a precious few, like the Virginia opossum and the dormouse) were unable to adapt to the newclimate and perished. It hit the primate family especially hard. In the New World, the primate population shrunk significantly. Any primate living in, say, theGreat Lakes region simply went extinct, unable to cope with the new Wisconsin winters.

    In South America, the primates contracted to the region around the equator. Buteven the hottest, southernmost parts of North America--then still detached fromSouth America--were too chilly or otherwise inhospitable for the North AmericanPrimates. The few places where they maybe could have survived, like the FloridaKeys and the islands of the Caribbean, were inaccessible. Sure, monkeys could have survived in Aruba, if they had arrived at just the right time. But the chances of getting there on some kind of float, the way primates had come over from Africa so many millions of years before, were slim, and the Earth was cooling rapi

    dly. There are some primate fossils from the Caribbean; "Some monkeys have gotten to some of the Caribbean islands and gone extinct," says Dr. Flynn. Another collection of random events and they might have survived, but not this time.

    Spider MonkeySpider Monkey: This is a Geoffroy's Spider Monkey, also known as Black-handed Spider Monkey. Wikimedia Commons

    The specific type of primate that survived is called the Platyrrhines. "The Platyrrhines, or New World monkeys," says Dr. Flynn, "are all arboreal. They live intropical forests; they're specialized for that kind of habitat." So the monkeyswe now know, which live in the warmer and more forested parts of South and Central America, are all the survivors of the cooling planet. They lucked out and en

    ded up in the one section of the New World that could suit them. And there theystayed, adapting and evolving. Then, 3 million years ago, the Isthmus of Panamaformed, connecting North and South America and separating the Atlantic from thePacific Oceans. That's not that long ago, in geographic terms. A few species--Dr. Flynn specifically named the various species of spider monkey--were hardy enough to move north along the isthmus and survive as far north as southern Mexico.North of that was desert. Too dry and too sparsely forested for a New World monkey to traverse.

    Why haven't they moved further north? Well, the Platyrrhines are not especiallyadaptable animals. Unlike the macaque and other Old World monkeys--or even non-primates, like the raccoon or fox--they need trees, they need heat, and they needmoisture. Push them too far north and they simply won't survive. There's a dist

    inct climate zone division in southern Mexico--no Mexican monkey can make it onthe northern side.

    UakariUakari: A male uakari, a New World monkey. Wikimedia Commons

    Primates are often intelligent, but that doesn't translate into adaptability. Think of the mountain gorilla, restricted to a few populations in forested centralAfrica, unable to live anywhere else. Adaptability is often a sign of intelligence, but intelligence in a species is no guarantee of adaptability.

  • 7/30/2019 Why Are There No Native Monkeys in North America?

    3/3

    The recurring answer to the question of why there are no monkeys in the US is "how would they get here?" Other animals, and probably humans, passed over the Bering Land Bridge from Russian into Alaska, but the Bering Land Bridge appeared only 20,000 years ago--long after the planet had cooled to when that latitude would be deathly cold for a monkey. "The only way you could get to North America would be polar routes or through water," says Dr. Flynn. "Even the most extreme monkeys don't get to the super high latitudes, so the continent was effectively sealed off."

    Monkeys can certainly survive in North America. The Mystery Monkey of Tampa is proof enough of that. But for them to survive here, they have to get here--the monkeys that were here, the Platyrrhines, aren't the ones to survive in a place like Tampa. It's actually possible that a Platyrrhine could maybe give it a go inthe Caribbean or the Florida Keys, the most tropical environments north of Mexico, but: how would they get there (since those are all islands) and would they beable to survive with as much human settlement as those places have?

    Rhesus MacaqueRhesus Macaque: Wikimedia Commons

    Macaques could make it, but it would take someone bringing them here--and that'sexactly what happened in the case of the Mystery Monkey, which was part of a troupe of macaques released by some lunatic tour boat operator known as "Colonel T

    ooey" who thought the macaques would make for a better "Jungle Cruise." (This isa true story. Florida is weird.) Short of a whole bunch of determined crazies,monkeys that would survive in North America don't have the means to get here.

    But! What about global warming? Could the scourge of climate change lead to a friendly neighborhood monkey in Brooklyn? "Anything is possible in evolution," says Dr. Flynn. "If climate change continues and it gets warmer globally, they could continue further north." But we'd need continuous forests from southern Mexicoon northwards, and "dryness is an issue, though in the future they might get increased rainfall." So, no monkeys in the near future. But if the temperature keeps rising, I'll keep an eye out my window just the same.