If a species of hominini are found in the Southern U.S. region would they be known as Hominini grits?
C’mon, this isn’t the worst joke in this thread … or is it?
Don’t mind me I’m just frustrated because I knew the answer (which doesn’t happen often) and didn’t get here quick enough to post it.
No…I believe I’ve taken (and retaken, several times) that title for this thread…
Well it got a good groan out of me, so I say “Bravo!”
I wasn’t the one looking for “murine”, I was looking for “musteline” (weasel-like).
Let’s just say it wasn’t his looks so much as his behavior.
The word is “rat-tastic.”
Yes, to be technical: the cat, lynx, puma, cheetah, lion, tiger, leopard, and jaguar are all Felids (of the Felid Family).
The cat, lynx, and puma are the true Felines (of the Feline Subfamily). The cheetah is an Acinochine; and the lion, tiger, leopard and jaguar are Pantherines.
Now, here’s the tricky part… what’s the English from of a Genus name? The cat’s Genus is Felis. If we make that ‘feline,’ how do we distinguish it from the Subfamily name?
Among the Canid Family (coyote, wolf, dog, jackal, fox), there are no Subfamilies. And so we have the Canine Genus (coyote, wolf, dog, jackal) and the Vulpine Genus (foxes), and, I guess, the Urocyonine Genus of the gray fox.
I guess if we want to be always correctly understood, then no matter how one forms the adjective in English, one should add the classification, as in: The Feline Subfamily v. the Feline Genus v. the Felid Family.
The Hominid Family (great apes, us included) and the Hylobatid Family (lesser apes, e.g., gibbons) form the Humanoid Superfamily (Hominoidea, the apes).
The Hominid Family is divided into two Subfamilies: The Pongines (orangutans) and the Hominines (humans, chimps, and gorillas).
The Hominine Subfamily is divided into two tribes: The Gorillini (gorillas) and the Hominini (humans and chimps). Yes, we have no English equivalent of ‘Hominini’ that would distinguish it from the Family of Hominines. Perhaps the Humines? or Homininines? Anyway, let’s just say we have a Hominine Subfamily and a Hominine Tribe.
The Hominine Tribe is divided into the Genera of Pan (chimps and bonobos) and Homo (humans, including the extinct species). And so, note that chimps and bonobos are included in Hominini.
Here’s a breakdown:
ORDER: Carnivores
ORDER: Rodents
ORDER: Primates
SUBORDER: Strepsirrhini (non-tarsier prosimians, lemurs [twisted? nose])
SUBORDER: Haplorhini (simple nose)
INFRAORDER: Tarsiiformes
FAMILY: Tarsiidae (tarsiers)
INFRAORDER: Simiiformes (simians -- snub nose, or ‘ape’)
SUBINFRAORDER: Platyrrhini (flat nose, New World Monkeys)
[the above is an unranked division, I made up the rank name]
FAMILY: Cebidae: marmosets, tamarins, capuchins and squirrel monkeys
FAMILY: Nyctipithecidae: night monkeys, owl monkeys, douroucoulis
FAMILY: Pitheciidae: titis, sakis and uakaris
FAMILY: Atelidae: howler, spider and woolly monkeys
SUBINFRAORDER: Catarrhini (skinny nose) [unranked division, I made up the rank name]
SUPERFAMILY: Cercopithecoidea
FAMILY: Cercopithecidae (Old World Monkeys - ‘tailed apes’ - monkeys, macaques,
vervets, monas, guenons, baboons, mandrills, colobus, langurs)
SUPERFAMILY: Hominoidea (humanoids) 'apes'
FAMILY: Hylobatidae (gibbons) 'lesser apes'
FAMILY: Hominidae (hominids) 'great apes'
SUBFAMILY: Homininae (hominines)
TRIBE: Hominini (homininies? humanish? homines?)
GENUS: Homo (human)
SPECIES: sapiens (humans ‘wise’)
GENUS: Australopithecis
SPECIES: afarensis (‘Lucy’, extinct)
GENUS: Pan
SPECIES: troglodytes (chimpanzee)
SPECIES: paniscus (bonobo)
TRIBE: Gorillini
GENUS: Gorilla
SPECIES: gorilla (western gorilla)
SPECIES: beringei (eastern gorilla)
SUBFAMILY: Ponginae
GENUS: Pongo
SPECIES: pymaeus (bornean organgutan)
SPECIES: abelii (sumatran organgutan)
Peace.
Cool! Chimps and bonobos are hominini too!
I can’t help thinking that homi-nini makes us all sound like “dumb man”, but I guess as we move from the older Linnean taxonomy into something more representative of the molecular reality, we must agree that change is good.