Pelycodus is placed within adapiforms because of its annular
ectotympanic, small eyes, non-elongated
tarsus and numerous
premolar and
molar crests and within
Notharctinae because of its four premolars, unfused
mandible, a
hypocone derived from the
postprotocingulum and a
lacrimal bone within the orbit. There is, however, a great deal of individual variation in the dentition of
Pelycodus, which has made it hard to differentiate between
Pelycodus and
Cantius species. Distinguishing features of the
Cantius/
Pelycodus clade are the comparatively smaller
hypocones and
mesostyles. The distinguishing features of
Pelycodus from
Cantius are its anteroposteriorly compressed trigonid, its small paraconid on M2 and lack of hypoconulid on M1-2. The shape of the molars indicates that
Pelycodus, like
Cantius and unlike later folivorous Notharctines such as
Notharctus and
Smilodectes, was most likely a frugivore, though perhaps not as strictly as
Cantius. However, there is almost no difference between the tarsal bones of the earliest
Cantius and latest
Pelycodus, indicating that their arboreal, quadrupedal locomotion was probably primitive. Only with later Notharctines was there a shift toward more lemur-like locomotion with longer hindlimbs, trunks and tails, perhaps related to the shift in diet. ==Phylogeny==