Fossil record Fossils of
tarsiiform primates have been found in other parts of Asia, (with disputed fossils from Northern Africa), but extant tarsiers are restricted to several Southeast Asian islands. The fossil record indicates that their
dentition has not changed much, except in size, over the past 45 million years. Within the family Tarsiidae, there are two extinct genera—
Xanthorhysis and
Afrotarsius; however, the placement of
Afrotarsius is not certain, and it is sometimes listed in its own family,
Afrotarsiidae, within the infraorder Tarsiiformes, or considered a
simian (anthropoid) primate. •
Hesperotarsius thailandicus lived during the
Early Miocene in northwestern
Thailand. •
Hesperotarsius sindhensis lived during the
Miocene in
Pakistan. •
Tarsius sirindhornae lived during the
Middle Miocene in northern
Thailand. The genus
Tarsius has a longer fossil record than any other primate genus, but the assignment of the Eocene and Miocene fossils to the genus is dubious.
Classification The
phylogenetic position of extant tarsiers within the order Primates has been debated for much of the 20th century, and tarsiers have alternately been classified with
strepsirrhine primates in the suborder Prosimii, or as the sister group to the
simians (Anthropoidea) in the infraorder
Haplorhini. Analysis of
SINE insertions, a type of macromutation to the DNA, is argued to offer very persuasive evidence for the
monophyly of Haplorhini, where other lines of evidence, such as
DNA sequence data, remain ambiguous. Thus, some systematists argue the debate is conclusively settled in favor of a monophyletic Haplorrhini. In common with simians, tarsiers have a mutation in the
L-gulonolactone oxidase (GULO) gene, which prevents their bodies from synthesizing vitamin C so they must find it in the diet. Since the strepsirrhines do not have this mutation and have retained the ability to make vitamin C, the genetic trait that confers the need for it in the diet would tend to place tarsiers with haplorhines. (
Carlito syrichta), one of the smallest primates At a lower phylogenetic level, the tarsiers have, until recently, all been placed in the genus
Tarsius, Species level
taxonomy is complex, with
morphology often being of limited use compared to vocalizations. Further confusion existed over the validity of certain names. Among others, the widely used
T. dianae has been shown to be a
junior synonym of
T. dentatus, and comparably,
T. spectrum is now considered a junior synonym of
T. tarsier. In 2014, scientists published the results of a genetic study from across the range of the
Philippine tarsier, revealing previously unrecognised genetic diversity. Three subspecies are recognised in the established taxonomy:
Carlito syrichta syrichta from
Leyte and
Samar,
C. syrichta fraterculus from
Bohol, and
C. syrichta carbonarius from
Mindanao. Their analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences suggested that ssp.
syrichta and
fraterculus may represent a single lineage, whereas ssp.
carbonarius may represent two lineages – one occupies the majority of Mindanao while the other is in northeastern Mindanao and the nearby
Dinagat Island, which the authors termed the 'Dinagat-Caraga tarsier'. More detailed studies that integrate morphological data will be needed to review the taxonomy of tarsiers in the Philippines. • Infraorder Tarsiiformes •
Family Tarsiidae: tarsiers • '
Genus Carlito''''' •
Philippine tarsier,
Carlito syrichta •
C. s. syrichta •
C. s. fraterculus (to be combined into
C. s. syrichta?) •
C. s. carbonarius • '
Genus Cephalopachus''''' •
Horsfield's tarsier,
Cephalopachus bancanus •
C. b. bancanus •
C. b. natunensis •
C. b. boreanus •
C. b. saltator • '
Genus Tarsius''''' •
Dian's tarsier,
T. dentatus •
Makassar tarsier T. fuscus •
Lariang tarsier,
T. lariang •
Niemitz's tarsier,
T. niemitzi •
Peleng tarsier,
T. pelengensis •
Sangihe tarsier,
T. sangirensis •
Gursky's spectral tarsier,
T. spectrumgurskyae •
Jatna's tarsier,
T. supriatnai •
Spectral tarsier,
T. tarsier •
Siau Island tarsier,
T. tumpara •
Pygmy tarsier,
T. pumilus •
Wallace's tarsier,
T. wallacei ==Anatomy and physiology==