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Ape

Apes (collectively Hominoidea /hɒmɪˈnɔɪdi.ə/) are a clade of Old World simians native to sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia (though they were more widespread in Africa, most of Asia, and Europe in prehistory), which together with its sister group Cercopithecidae form the catarrhine clade, cladistically making them monkeys. Apes do not have tails due to a mutation of the TBXT gene.[2] In traditional and non-scientific use, the term ape can include tailless primates taxonomically considered Cercopithecidae (such as the Barbary ape and black ape), and is thus not equivalent to the scientific taxon Hominoidea. There are two extant branches of the superfamily Hominoidea: the gibbons, or lesser apes; and the hominids, or great apes.

  • The family Hylobatidae, the lesser apes, include four genera and a total of 20 species of gibbon, including the lar gibbon and the siamang, all native to Asia. They are highly arboreal and bipedal on the ground. They have lighter bodies and smaller social groups than great apes.
  • The family Hominidae (hominids), the great apes, include four genera comprising three extant species of orangutans and their subspecies, two extant species of gorillas and their subspecies, two extant species of panins (bonobos and chimpanzees) and their subspecies, and humans in a single extant subspecies.[a][3][4][5]
Hominoids or apes
Temporal range: Miocene-Holocene
Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelli)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Parvorder: Catarrhini
Superfamily: Hominoidea
Gray, 1825[1]
Type species
Homo sapiens
Families

sister: Cercopithecoidea

Except for gorillas and humans, hominoids are agile climbers of trees. Apes eat a variety of plant and animal foods, with the majority of food being plant foods, which can include fruits, leaves, stalks, roots and seeds, including nuts and grass seeds. Human diets are sometimes substantially different from that of other hominoids due in part to the development of technology and a wide range of habitation. Humans are by far the most numerous of the hominoid species, in fact outnumbering all other primates by a factor of several thousand to one.

All non-human hominoids are rare and threatened with extinction. The eastern hoolock gibbon is the least threatened, only being vulnerable to extinction. Five gibbon species are critically endangered, as are all species of orangutan and gorilla. The remaining species of gibbon, the bonobo, and all four species of chimpanzees are endangered. The chief threat to most of the endangered species is loss of tropical rainforest habitat, though some populations are further imperiled by hunting for bushmeat. The great apes of Africa are also facing threat from the Ebola virus. Currently considered to be the greatest threat to survival of African apes, Ebola infection is responsible for the death of at least one third of all gorillas and chimpanzees since 1990.[6]

Name and terminology

"Ape", from Old English apa, is a word of uncertain origin.[b] The term has a history of rather imprecise usage—and of comedic or punning usage in the vernacular. Its earliest meaning was generally of any non-human anthropoid primate, as is still the case for its cognates in other Germanic languages.[c][7] Later, after the term "monkey" had been introduced into English, "ape" was specialized to refer to a tailless (therefore exceptionally human-like) primate.[8] Thus, the term "ape" obtained two different meanings, as shown in the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica entry: it could be used as a synonym for "monkey" and it could denote the tailless human-like primate in particular.[9]

Some, or recently all, hominoids are also called "apes", but the term is used broadly and has several different senses within both popular and scientific settings. "Ape" has been used as a synonym for "monkey" or for naming any primate with a human-like appearance, particularly those without a tail.[9] Biologists have traditionally used the term "ape" to mean a member of the superfamily Hominoidea other than humans,[3] but more recently to mean all members of Hominoidea. So "ape"—not to be confused with "great ape"—now becomes another word for hominoid including humans.[5][d]

The taxonomic term hominoid is derived from, and intended as encompassing, the hominids, the family of great apes. Both terms were introduced by Gray (1825).[10] The term hominins is also due to Gray (1824), intended as including the human lineage (see also Hominidae#Terminology, Human taxonomy).

The distinction between apes and monkeys is complicated by the traditional paraphyly of monkeys: Apes emerged as a sister group of Old World Monkeys in the catarrhines, which are a sister group of New World Monkeys. Therefore, cladistically, apes, catarrhines and related contemporary extinct groups such as Parapithecidaea are monkeys as well, for any consistent definition of "monkey". "Old World Monkey" may also legitimately be taken to be meant to include all the catarrhines, including apes and extinct species such as Aegyptopithecus,[11][12][13][14][citation needed] in which case the apes, Cercopithecoidea and Aegyptopithecus emerged within the Old World Monkeys.

The primates called "apes" today became known to Europeans after the 18th century. As zoological knowledge developed, it became clear that taillessness occurred in a number of different and otherwise distantly related species. Sir Wilfrid Le Gros Clark was one of those primatologists who developed the idea that there were trends in primate evolution and that the extant members of the order could be arranged in an ".. ascending series", leading from "monkeys" to "apes" to humans. Within this tradition "ape" came to refer to all members of the superfamily Hominoidea except humans.[3] As such, this use of "apes" represented a paraphyletic grouping, meaning that, even though all species of apes were descended from a common ancestor, this grouping did not include all the descendant species, because humans were excluded from being among the apes.[e]

Traditionally, the English-language vernacular name "apes" does not include humans, but phylogenetically, humans (Homo) form part of the family Hominidae within Hominoidea. Thus, there are at least three common, or traditional, uses of the term "ape": non-specialists may not distinguish between "monkeys" and "apes", that is, they may use the two terms interchangeably; or they may use "ape" for any tailless monkey or non-human hominoid; or they may use the term "ape" to just mean the non-human hominoids.

Modern taxonomy aims for the use of monophyletic groups for taxonomic classification;[15][f] Some literature may now use the common name "ape" to mean all members of the superfamily Hominoidea, including humans. For example, in his 2005 book, Benton wrote "The apes, Hominoidea, today include the gibbons and orang-utan ... the gorilla and chimpanzee ... and humans".[5] Modern biologists and primatologists refer to apes that are not human as "non-human" apes. Scientists broadly, other than paleoanthropologists, may use the term "hominin" to identify the human clade, replacing the term "hominid". See terminology of primate names.

See below, History of hominoid taxonomy, for a discussion of changes in scientific classification and terminology regarding hominoids.

Evolution

Although the hominoid fossil record is still incomplete and fragmentary, there is now enough evidence to provide an outline of the evolutionary history of humans. Previously, the divergence between humans and other extant hominoids was thought to have occurred 15 to 20 million years ago, and several species of that time period, such as Ramapithecus, were once thought to be hominins and possible ancestors of humans. But, later fossil finds indicated that Ramapithecus was more closely related to the orangutan; and new biochemical evidence indicates that the last common ancestor of humans and non-hominins (that is, the chimpanzees) occurred between 5 and 10 million years ago, and probably nearer the lower end of that range (more recent); see Chimpanzee–human last common ancestor (CHLCA).

Taxonomic classification and phylogeny

Genetic analysis combined with fossil evidence indicates that hominoids diverged from the Old World monkeys about 25 million years ago (mya), near the Oligocene–Miocene boundary.[16][17][18] The gibbons split from the rest about 18 mya, and the hominid splits happened 14 mya (Pongo),[19] 7 mya (Gorilla), and 3–5 mya (Homo & Pan).[20] In 2015, a new genus and species were described, Pliobates cataloniae, which lived 11.6 mya, and appears to predate the split between Hominidae and Hylobatidae.[21][22][23][5][clarification needed]

Crown Catharrhini (31)
(29)
Hominoidea (30)

Dendropithecidae (†7 Mya)

Ekembo heseloni (†17 Mya)

Proconsulidae (†18 Mya)

Ekembo nyanzae (†17 Mya)

(29)

Equatorius (†16)

Pliobates (†11.6 Mya)

(29)
Afropithecidae (28)

Morotopithecus (†20)

Afropithecus (†16)

Crown Hominoidea (22)
Catarrhini (31.0 Mya)
 Hominoidea/apes (20.4 Mya)
 Hominidae/great apes (15.7 Mya)
 Homininae (8.8 Mya)
 Hominini (6.3 Mya)

humans (genus Homo)  

chimpanzees (genus Pan)  

gorillas (genus Gorilla)  

orangutans (genus Pongo)  

gibbons/lesser apes (family Hylobatidae)  




Traditional apes

Cercopithecoidea   Old World monkeys

 
Skeletons of members of the ape superfamily, Hominoidea. There are two extant families: Hominidae, the "great apes"; and Hylobatidae, the gibbons, or "lesser apes".
 
From left: Comparison of size of gibbon, human, chimpanzee, gorilla and orangutan. Non-human hominoids do not stand upright as their normal posture.

The families, and extant genera and species of hominoids are:

History of hominoid taxonomy

The history of hominoid taxonomy is complex and somewhat confusing. Recent evidence has changed our understanding of the relationships between the hominoids, especially regarding the human lineage; and the traditionally used terms have become somewhat confused. Competing approaches to methodology and terminology are found among current scientific sources. Over time, authorities have changed the names and the meanings of names of groups and subgroups as new evidence — that is, new discoveries of fossils and tools and of observations in the field, plus continual comparisons of anatomy and DNA sequences — has changed the understanding of relationships between hominoids. There has been a gradual demotion of humans from being 'special' in the taxonomy to being one branch among many. This recent turmoil (of history) illustrates the growing influence on all taxonomy of cladistics, the science of classifying living things strictly according to their lines of descent.[citation needed]

Today, there are eight extant genera of hominoids. They are the four genera in the family Hominidae, namely Homo, Pan, Gorilla, and Pongo; plus four genera in the family Hylobatidae (gibbons): Hylobates, Hoolock, Nomascus and Symphalangus.[24] (The two subspecies of hoolock gibbons were recently moved from the genus Bunopithecus to the new genus Hoolock and re-ranked as species; a third species was described in January 2017).[27]

In 1758, Carl Linnaeus, relying on second- or third-hand accounts, placed a second species in Homo along with H. sapiens: Homo troglodytes ("cave-dwelling man"). Although the term "Orang Outang" is listed as a variety – Homo sylvestris – under this species, it is nevertheless not clear to which animal this name refers, as Linnaeus had no specimen to refer to, hence no precise description. Linnaeus may have based Homo troglodytes on reports of mythical creatures, then-unidentified simians, or Asian natives dressed in animal skins.[28] Linnaeus named the orangutan Simia satyrus ("satyr monkey"). He placed the three genera Homo, Simia and Lemur in the order of Primates.

The troglodytes name was used for the chimpanzee by Blumenbach in 1775, but moved to the genus Simia. The orangutan was moved to the genus Pongo in 1799 by Lacépède.

Linnaeus's inclusion of humans in the primates with monkeys and apes was troubling for people who denied a close relationship between humans and the rest of the animal kingdom. Linnaeus's Lutheran archbishop had accused him of "impiety". In a letter to Johann Georg Gmelin dated 25 February 1747, Linnaeus wrote:

It is not pleasing to me that I must place humans among the primates, but man is intimately familiar with himself. Let's not quibble over words. It will be the same to me whatever name is applied. But I desperately seek from you and from the whole world a general difference between men and simians from the principles of Natural History. I certainly know of none. If only someone might tell me one! If I called man a simian or vice versa I would bring together all the theologians against me. Perhaps I ought to, in accordance with the law of Natural History.[29]

Accordingly, Johann Friedrich Blumenbach in the first edition of his Manual of Natural History (1779), proposed that the primates be divided into the Quadrumana (four-handed, i.e. apes and monkeys) and Bimana (two-handed, i.e. humans). This distinction was taken up by other naturalists, most notably Georges Cuvier. Some elevated the distinction to the level of order.

However, the many affinities between humans and other primates – and especially the "great apes" – made it clear that the distinction made no scientific sense. In his 1871 book The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex, Charles Darwin wrote:

The greater number of naturalists who have taken into consideration the whole structure of man, including his mental faculties, have followed Blumenbach and Cuvier, and have placed man in a separate Order, under the title of the Bimana, and therefore on an equality with the orders of the Quadrumana, Carnivora, etc. Recently many of our best naturalists have recurred to the view first propounded by Linnaeus, so remarkable for his sagacity, and have placed man in the same Order with the Quadrumana, under the title of the Primates. The justice of this conclusion will be admitted: for in the first place, we must bear in mind the comparative insignificance for classification of the great development of the brain in man, and that the strongly marked differences between the skulls of man and the Quadrumana (lately insisted upon by Bischoff, Aeby, and others) apparently follow from their differently developed brains. In the second place, we must remember that nearly all the other and more important differences between man and the Quadrumana are manifestly adaptive in their nature, and relate chiefly to the erect position of man; such as the structure of his hand, foot, and pelvis, the curvature of his spine, and the position of his head.[30]

Changes in taxonomy and terminology

Humans the non-apes: Until about 1960, taxonomists typically divided the superfamily Hominoidea into two families. The science community treated humans and their extinct relatives as the outgroup within the superfamily; that is, humans were considered as quite distant from kinship with the "apes". Humans were classified as the family Hominidae and were known as the "hominids". All other hominoids were known as "apes" and were referred to the family Pongidae.[31]
 
The "great apes" in Pongidae: The 1960s saw the methodologies of molecular biology applied to primate taxonomy. Goodman's 1964 immunological study of serum proteins led to re-classifying the hominoids into three families: the humans in Hominidae; the great apes in Pongidae; and the "lesser apes" (gibbons) in Hylobatidae.[32] However, this arrangement had two trichotomies: Pan, Gorilla, and Pongo of the "great apes" in Pongidae, and Hominidae, Pongidae, and Hylobatidae in Hominoidea. These presented a puzzle; scientists wanted to know which genus speciated first from the common hominoid ancestor.
 
Gibbons the outgroup: New studies indicated that gibbons, not humans, are the outgroup within the superfamily Hominoidea, meaning: the rest of the hominoids are more closely related to each other than (any of them) are to the gibbons. With this splitting, the gibbons (Hylobates, et al.) were isolated after moving the great apes into the same family as humans. Now the term "hominid" encompassed a larger collective taxa within the family Hominidae. With the family trichotomy settled, scientists could now work to learn which genus is 'least' related to the others in the subfamily Ponginae.
 
Orangutans the outgroup: Investigations comparing humans and the three other hominid genera disclosed that the African apes (chimpanzees and gorillas) and humans are more closely related to each other than any of them are to the Asian orangutans (Pongo); that is, the orangutans, not humans, are the outgroup within the family Hominidae. This led to reassigning the African apes to the subfamily Homininae with humans—which presented a new three-way split: Homo, Pan, and Gorilla.[33]
 
Hominins: In an effort to resolve the trichotomy, while preserving the nostalgic "outgroup" status of humans, the subfamily Homininae was divided into two tribes: Gorillini, comprising genus Pan and genus Gorilla; and Hominini, comprising genus Homo (the humans). Humans and close relatives now began to be known as "hominins", that is, of the tribe Hominini. Thus, the term "hominin" succeeded to the previous use of "hominid", which meaning had changed with changes in Hominidae (see above: 3rd graphic, "Gibbons the outgroup").
 
Gorillas the outgroup: New DNA comparisons now provided evidence that gorillas, not humans, are the outgroup in the subfamily Homininae; this suggested that chimpanzees should be grouped with humans in the tribe Hominini, but in separate subtribes.[34] Now the name "hominin" delineated Homo plus those earliest Homo relatives and ancestors that arose after the divergence from the chimpanzees. (Humans are no longer recognized as an outgroup, but are a branch, deep in the tree of the pre-1960s ape group).
 
Speciation of gibbons: Later DNA comparisons disclosed previously unknown speciation of genus Hylobates (gibbons) into four genera: Hylobates, Hoolock, Nomascus, and Symphalangus.[24][27] The ordering of speciation of these four genera are being investigated as of 2022.
 

Characteristics

 
Like those of the orangutan, the shoulder joints of hominoids are adapted to brachiation, or movement by swinging in tree branches.

The lesser apes are the gibbon family, Hylobatidae, of sixteen species; all are native to Asia. Their major differentiating characteristic is their long arms, which they use to brachiate through trees. Their wrists are ball and socket joints as an evolutionary adaptation to their arboreal lifestyle. Generally smaller than the African apes, the largest gibbon, the siamang, weighs up to 14 kg (31 lb); in comparison, the smallest "great ape", the bonobo, is 34 to 60 kg (75 to 132 lb).

The superfamily Hominoidea falls within the parvorder Catarrhini, which also includes the Old World monkeys of Africa and Eurasia. Within this grouping, the two families Hylobatidae and Hominidae can be distinguished from Old World monkeys by the number of cusps on their molars; hominoids have five in the "Y-5" molar pattern, whereas Old World monkeys have only four in a bilophodont pattern.

Further, in comparison with Old World monkeys, hominoids are noted for: more mobile shoulder joints and arms due to the dorsal position of the scapula; broader ribcages that are flatter front-to-back; and a shorter, less mobile spine, with greatly reduced caudal (tail) vertebrae—resulting in complete loss of the tail in extant hominoid species. These are anatomical adaptations, first, to vertical hanging and swinging locomotion (brachiation) and, later, to developing balance in a bipedal pose. Note there are primates in other families that also lack tails, and at least one, the pig-tailed langur, is known to walk significant distances bipedally. The front of the ape skull is characterised by its sinuses, fusion of the frontal bone, and by post-orbital constriction.

Distinction from monkeys

Cladistically, apes, catarrhines, and extinct species such as Aegyptopithecus and Parapithecidaea, are monkeys,[citation needed] so one can only specify ape features not present in other monkeys.

Unlike most monkeys, apes do not possess a tail. Monkeys are more likely to be in trees and use their tails for balance. While the great apes are considerably larger than monkeys, gibbons (lesser apes) are smaller than some monkeys. Apes are considered to be more intelligent than monkeys, which are considered to have more primitive brains.[35]

The enzyme urate oxidase has become inactive in all apes, its function having been lost in two primate lineages during the middle Miocene; first in the common ancestors of Hominidae, and later in the common ancestor of Hylobatidae. It has been hypothesized that in both incidents it was a mutation that occurred in apes living in Europe when the climate was getting colder, leading to starvation during winter. The mutation changed the biochemistry of the apes and made it easier to accumulate fat, which allowed the animals to survive longer periods of starvation. When they migrated to Asia and Africa, this genetic trait remained.[36][37]

Behaviour

Major studies of behaviour in the field were completed on the three better-known "great apes", for example by Jane Goodall, Dian Fossey and Birutė Galdikas. These studies have shown that in their natural environments, the non-human hominoids show sharply varying social structure: gibbons are monogamous, territorial pair-bonders, orangutans are solitary, gorillas live in small troops with a single adult male leader, while chimpanzees live in larger troops with bonobos exhibiting promiscuous sexual behaviour. Their diets also vary; gorillas are foliovores, while the others are all primarily frugivores, although the common chimpanzee hunts for meat. Foraging behaviour is correspondingly variable.

In November 2023, scientists reported, for the first time, evidence that groups of primates, including apes, and, particularly bonobos, are capable of cooperating with each other.[38][39]

Diet

Apart from humans and gorillas, apes eat a predominantly frugivorous diet, mostly fruit, but supplemented with a variety of other foods. Gorillas are predominantly folivorous, eating mostly stalks, shoots, roots and leaves with some fruit and other foods. Non-human apes usually eat a small amount of raw animal foods such as insects or eggs. In the case of humans, migration and the invention of hunting tools and cooking has led to an even wider variety of foods and diets, with many human diets including large amounts of cooked tubers (roots) or legumes.[40] Other food production and processing methods including animal husbandry and industrial refining and processing have further changed human diets.[41] Humans and other apes occasionally eat other primates.[42] Some of these primates are now close to extinction with habitat loss being the underlying cause.[43][44]

Cognition

 
This series of images shows a gorilla using a small tree trunk as a tool. The trunk is used to maintain balance while fishing for aquatic plants

All the non-human hominoids are generally thought of as highly intelligent, and scientific study has broadly confirmed that they perform very well on a wide range of cognitive tests—though there is relatively little data on gibbon cognition. The early studies by Wolfgang Köhler demonstrated exceptional problem-solving abilities in chimpanzees, which Köhler attributed to insight. The use of tools has been repeatedly demonstrated; more recently, the manufacture of tools has been documented, both in the wild and in laboratory tests. Imitation is much more easily demonstrated in "great apes" than in other primate species. Almost all the studies in animal language acquisition have been done with "great apes", and though there is continuing dispute as to whether they demonstrate real language abilities, there is no doubt that they involve significant feats of learning. Chimpanzees in different parts of Africa have developed tools that are used in food acquisition, demonstrating a form of animal culture.[45]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Although Dawkins is clear that he uses "apes" for Hominoidea, he also uses "great apes" in ways which exclude humans. Thus in Dawkins 2005: "Long before people thought in terms of evolution ... great apes were often confused with humans" (p. 114); "gibbons are faithfully monogamous, unlike the great apes which are our closer relatives" (p. 126).
  2. ^ The hypothetical Proto-Germanic form is given as *apōn (F. Kluge, Etymologisches Wörterbuch der Deutschen Sprache (2002), online version, s.v. "Affe"; V. Orel, A handbook of Germanic etymology (2003), s.v. "*apōn" or as *apa(n) (Online Etymology Dictionary (2001–2014), s.v. "ape"; M. Philippa, F. Debrabandere, A. Quak, T. Schoonheim & N. van der Sijs, Etymologisch woordenboek van het Nederlands (2003–2009), s.v. "aap"). Perhaps ultimately derived from a non-Indo-European language, the word might be a direct borrowing from Celtic, or perhaps from Slavic, although in both cases it is also argued that the borrowing, if it took place, went in the opposite direction.
  3. ^ "Any simian known on the Mediterranean during the Middle Ages; monkey or ape"; cf. ape-ward: "a juggler who keeps a trained monkey for the amusement of the crowd." (Middle English Dictionary, s.v. "ape").
  4. ^ Dawkins 2005; for example "[a]ll apes except humans are hairy" (p. 99), "[a]mong the apes, gibbons are second only to humans" (p. 126).
  5. ^ Definitions of paraphyly vary; for the one used here see e.g. Stace 2010, pp. 106
  6. ^ Definitions of monophyly vary; for the one used here see e.g. Mishler 2009, pp. 114

References

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  2. ^ Xia, Bo; Zhang, Weimin; Wudzinska, Aleksandra; Huang, Emily; Brosh, Ran; Pour, Maayan; Miller, Alexander; Dasen, Jeremy S.; Maurano, Matthew T.; Kim, Sang Y.; Boeke, Jef D. (16 September 2021). "The genetic basis of tail-loss evolution in humans and apes". bioRxiv 10.1101/2021.09.14.460388.
  3. ^ a b c Dixson 1981, pp. 13.
  4. ^ Grehan, J. R. (2006). "Mona Lisa smile: the morphological enigma of human and great ape evolution". Anatomical Record. 289B (4): 139–157. doi:10.1002/ar.b.20107. PMID 16865704.
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  6. ^ Rush, J. (23 January 2015). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 30 March 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  7. ^ Terry 1977, pp. 3.
  8. ^ Terry 1977, pp. 3–4.
  9. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ape" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 160.
  10. ^ Gray, JE. "An outline of an attempt at the disposition of Mammalia into tribes and families, with a list of the genera apparently appertaining to each tribe". Annals of Philosophy. New Series. 10: 337–344. from the original on 27 April 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
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  19. ^ Alba, D. M.; Fortuny, J.; Moyà-Solà, S. (2010). "Enamel thickness in the Middle Miocene great apes Anoiapithecus, Pierolapithecus and Dryopithecus". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences. 277 (1691): 2237–2245. doi:10.1098/rspb.2010.0218. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 2880156. PMID 20335211.
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Literature cited

  • Dawkins, R. (2005). The Ancestor's Tale (p/b ed.). London: Phoenix (Orion Books). ISBN 978-0-7538-1996-8.
  • Dixson, A. F. (1981). The Natural History of the Gorilla. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-77895-0.
  • Mishler, Brent D (2009). "Species are not uniquely real biological entities". In Ayala, F. J. & Arp, R. (eds.). Contemporary Debates in Philosophy of Biology. pp. 110–122. doi:10.1002/9781444314922.ch6. ISBN 978-1-4443-1492-2.
  • Stace, C. A. (2010). (PDF). Watsonia. 28: 103–122. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2010.
  • Terry, M. W. (1977). "Use of common and scientific nomenclature to designate laboratory primates". In Schrier, A. M. (ed.). Behavioral Primatology: Advances in Research and Theory. Vol. 1. Hillsdale, N.J., US: Lawrence Erlbaum.

External links

  •   Data related to Hominoidea at Wikispecies
  •   Hominoidea at Wikibooks
  • Pilbeam D. (September 2000). "Hominoid systematics: The soft evidence". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97 (20): 10684–6. Bibcode:2000PNAS...9710684P. doi:10.1073/pnas.210390497. PMC 34045. PMID 10995486. Agreement between cladograms based on molecular and anatomical data.
  • Human Timeline (Interactive) – Smithsonian, National Museum of Natural History (August 2016).

confused, with, hominidae, this, article, about, branch, primates, other, uses, disambiguation, collectively, hominoidea, ɔɪ, clade, world, simians, native, saharan, africa, southeast, asia, though, they, were, more, widespread, africa, most, asia, europe, pre. Not to be confused with Hominidae This article is about the branch of primates For other uses see Ape disambiguation Apes collectively Hominoidea h ɒ m ɪ ˈ n ɔɪ d i e are a clade of Old World simians native to sub Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia though they were more widespread in Africa most of Asia and Europe in prehistory which together with its sister group Cercopithecidae form the catarrhine clade cladistically making them monkeys Apes do not have tails due to a mutation of the TBXT gene 2 In traditional and non scientific use the term ape can include tailless primates taxonomically considered Cercopithecidae such as the Barbary ape and black ape and is thus not equivalent to the scientific taxon Hominoidea There are two extant branches of the superfamily Hominoidea the gibbons or lesser apes and the hominids or great apes The family Hylobatidae the lesser apes include four genera and a total of 20 species of gibbon including the lar gibbon and the siamang all native to Asia They are highly arboreal and bipedal on the ground They have lighter bodies and smaller social groups than great apes The family Hominidae hominids the great apes include four genera comprising three extant species of orangutans and their subspecies two extant species of gorillas and their subspecies two extant species of panins bonobos and chimpanzees and their subspecies and humans in a single extant subspecies a 3 4 5 Hominoids or apesTemporal range Miocene HoloceneSumatran orangutan Pongo abelli Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PrimatesSuborder HaplorhiniInfraorder SimiiformesParvorder CatarrhiniSuperfamily HominoideaGray 1825 1 Type speciesHomo sapiensLinnaeus 1758Families Proconsulidae Afropithecidae Pliobatidae Dendropithecidae Hylobatidae Hominidaesister Cercopithecoidea Except for gorillas and humans hominoids are agile climbers of trees Apes eat a variety of plant and animal foods with the majority of food being plant foods which can include fruits leaves stalks roots and seeds including nuts and grass seeds Human diets are sometimes substantially different from that of other hominoids due in part to the development of technology and a wide range of habitation Humans are by far the most numerous of the hominoid species in fact outnumbering all other primates by a factor of several thousand to one All non human hominoids are rare and threatened with extinction The eastern hoolock gibbon is the least threatened only being vulnerable to extinction Five gibbon species are critically endangered as are all species of orangutan and gorilla The remaining species of gibbon the bonobo and all four species of chimpanzees are endangered The chief threat to most of the endangered species is loss of tropical rainforest habitat though some populations are further imperiled by hunting for bushmeat The great apes of Africa are also facing threat from the Ebola virus Currently considered to be the greatest threat to survival of African apes Ebola infection is responsible for the death of at least one third of all gorillas and chimpanzees since 1990 6 Contents 1 Name and terminology 2 Evolution 3 Taxonomic classification and phylogeny 3 1 History of hominoid taxonomy 3 2 Changes in taxonomy and terminology 4 Characteristics 4 1 Distinction from monkeys 5 Behaviour 5 1 Diet 5 2 Cognition 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Literature cited 9 External linksName and terminology Ape from Old English apa is a word of uncertain origin b The term has a history of rather imprecise usage and of comedic or punning usage in the vernacular Its earliest meaning was generally of any non human anthropoid primate as is still the case for its cognates in other Germanic languages c 7 Later after the term monkey had been introduced into English ape was specialized to refer to a tailless therefore exceptionally human like primate 8 Thus the term ape obtained two different meanings as shown in the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica entry it could be used as a synonym for monkey and it could denote the tailless human like primate in particular 9 Some or recently all hominoids are also called apes but the term is used broadly and has several different senses within both popular and scientific settings Ape has been used as a synonym for monkey or for naming any primate with a human like appearance particularly those without a tail 9 Biologists have traditionally used the term ape to mean a member of the superfamily Hominoidea other than humans 3 but more recently to mean all members of Hominoidea So ape not to be confused with great ape now becomes another word for hominoid including humans 5 d The taxonomic term hominoid is derived from and intended as encompassing the hominids the family of great apes Both terms were introduced by Gray 1825 10 The term hominins is also due to Gray 1824 intended as including the human lineage see also Hominidae Terminology Human taxonomy The distinction between apes and monkeys is complicated by the traditional paraphyly of monkeys Apes emerged as a sister group of Old World Monkeys in the catarrhines which are a sister group of New World Monkeys Therefore cladistically apes catarrhines and related contemporary extinct groups such as Parapithecidaea are monkeys as well for any consistent definition of monkey Old World Monkey may also legitimately be taken to be meant to include all the catarrhines including apes and extinct species such as Aegyptopithecus 11 12 13 14 citation needed in which case the apes Cercopithecoidea and Aegyptopithecus emerged within the Old World Monkeys The primates called apes today became known to Europeans after the 18th century As zoological knowledge developed it became clear that taillessness occurred in a number of different and otherwise distantly related species Sir Wilfrid Le Gros Clark was one of those primatologists who developed the idea that there were trends in primate evolution and that the extant members of the order could be arranged in an ascending series leading from monkeys to apes to humans Within this tradition ape came to refer to all members of the superfamily Hominoidea except humans 3 As such this use of apes represented a paraphyletic grouping meaning that even though all species of apes were descended from a common ancestor this grouping did not include all the descendant species because humans were excluded from being among the apes e Traditionally the English language vernacular name apes does not include humans but phylogenetically humans Homo form part of the family Hominidae within Hominoidea Thus there are at least three common or traditional uses of the term ape non specialists may not distinguish between monkeys and apes that is they may use the two terms interchangeably or they may use ape for any tailless monkey or non human hominoid or they may use the term ape to just mean the non human hominoids Modern taxonomy aims for the use of monophyletic groups for taxonomic classification 15 f Some literature may now use the common name ape to mean all members of the superfamily Hominoidea including humans For example in his 2005 book Benton wrote The apes Hominoidea today include the gibbons and orang utan the gorilla and chimpanzee and humans 5 Modern biologists and primatologists refer to apes that are not human as non human apes Scientists broadly other than paleoanthropologists may use the term hominin to identify the human clade replacing the term hominid See terminology of primate names See below History of hominoid taxonomy for a discussion of changes in scientific classification and terminology regarding hominoids EvolutionThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Although the hominoid fossil record is still incomplete and fragmentary there is now enough evidence to provide an outline of the evolutionary history of humans Previously the divergence between humans and other extant hominoids was thought to have occurred 15 to 20 million years ago and several species of that time period such as Ramapithecus were once thought to be hominins and possible ancestors of humans But later fossil finds indicated that Ramapithecus was more closely related to the orangutan and new biochemical evidence indicates that the last common ancestor of humans and non hominins that is the chimpanzees occurred between 5 and 10 million years ago and probably nearer the lower end of that range more recent see Chimpanzee human last common ancestor CHLCA Taxonomic classification and phylogenyMain article List of hominoids Genetic analysis combined with fossil evidence indicates that hominoids diverged from the Old World monkeys about 25 million years ago mya near the Oligocene Miocene boundary 16 17 18 The gibbons split from the rest about 18 mya and the hominid splits happened 14 mya Pongo 19 7 mya Gorilla and 3 5 mya Homo amp Pan 20 In 2015 a new genus and species were described Pliobates cataloniae which lived 11 6 mya and appears to predate the split between Hominidae and Hylobatidae 21 22 23 5 clarification needed Crown Catharrhini 31 29 Saadanioidea 28 Cercopithecoidea 24 Victoriapithecinae 19 Crown CercopithecoideaHominoidea 30 Dendropithecidae 7 Mya Ekembo heseloni 17 Mya Proconsulidae 18 Mya Ekembo nyanzae 17 Mya 29 Equatorius 16 Pliobates 11 6 Mya 29 Afropithecidae 28 Morotopithecus 20 Afropithecus 16 Crown Hominoidea 22 HominidaeHylobatidaeCatarrhini 31 0 Mya Hominoidea apes 20 4 Mya Hominidae great apes 15 7 Mya Homininae 8 8 Mya Hominini 6 3 Mya humans genus Homo nbsp chimpanzees genus Pan nbsp gorillas genus Gorilla nbsp orangutans genus Pongo nbsp gibbons lesser apes family Hylobatidae nbsp Traditional apesCercopithecoidea nbsp Old World monkeys nbsp Skeletons of members of the ape superfamily Hominoidea There are two extant families Hominidae the great apes and Hylobatidae the gibbons or lesser apes nbsp From left Comparison of size of gibbon human chimpanzee gorilla and orangutan Non human hominoids do not stand upright as their normal posture The families and extant genera and species of hominoids are Superfamily Hominoidea 24 Family Hominidae hominids great apes Genus Pongo orangutans Bornean orangutan P pygmaeus Sumatran orangutan P abelii Tapanuli orangutan P tapanuliensis 25 Genus Gorilla gorillas Western gorilla G gorilla Eastern gorilla G beringei Genus Homo humans Human H sapiens Genus Pan chimpanzees Chimpanzee P troglodytes Bonobo P paniscus Family Hylobatidae gibbons lesser apes Genus Hylobates Lar gibbon or white handed gibbon H lar Bornean white bearded gibbon H albibarbis Agile gibbon or black handed gibbon H agilis Western grey gibbon or Abbott s grey gibbon H abbotti 26 Eastern grey gibbon or northern grey gibbon H funereus 26 Muller s gibbon or southern grey gibbon H muelleri Silvery gibbon H moloch Pileated gibbon or capped gibbon H pileatus Kloss s gibbon or Mentawai gibbon or bilou H klossii Genus Hoolock Western hoolock gibbon H hoolock Eastern hoolock gibbon H leuconedys Skywalker hoolock gibbon H tianxing Genus Symphalangus Siamang S syndactylus Genus Nomascus Northern buffed cheeked gibbon N annamensis Black crested gibbon N concolor Eastern black crested gibbon N nasutus Hainan black crested gibbon N hainanus Southern white cheeked gibbon N siki White cheeked crested gibbon N leucogenys Yellow cheeked gibbon N gabriellaeHistory of hominoid taxonomy Further information Human taxonomy History The history of hominoid taxonomy is complex and somewhat confusing Recent evidence has changed our understanding of the relationships between the hominoids especially regarding the human lineage and the traditionally used terms have become somewhat confused Competing approaches to methodology and terminology are found among current scientific sources Over time authorities have changed the names and the meanings of names of groups and subgroups as new evidence that is new discoveries of fossils and tools and of observations in the field plus continual comparisons of anatomy and DNA sequences has changed the understanding of relationships between hominoids There has been a gradual demotion of humans from being special in the taxonomy to being one branch among many This recent turmoil of history illustrates the growing influence on all taxonomy of cladistics the science of classifying living things strictly according to their lines of descent citation needed Today there are eight extant genera of hominoids They are the four genera in the family Hominidae namely Homo Pan Gorilla and Pongo plus four genera in the family Hylobatidae gibbons Hylobates Hoolock Nomascus and Symphalangus 24 The two subspecies of hoolock gibbons were recently moved from the genus Bunopithecus to the new genus Hoolock and re ranked as species a third species was described in January 2017 27 In 1758 Carl Linnaeus relying on second or third hand accounts placed a second species in Homo along with H sapiens Homo troglodytes cave dwelling man Although the term Orang Outang is listed as a variety Homo sylvestris under this species it is nevertheless not clear to which animal this name refers as Linnaeus had no specimen to refer to hence no precise description Linnaeus may have based Homo troglodytes on reports of mythical creatures then unidentified simians or Asian natives dressed in animal skins 28 Linnaeus named the orangutan Simia satyrus satyr monkey He placed the three genera Homo Simia and Lemur in the order of Primates The troglodytes name was used for the chimpanzee by Blumenbach in 1775 but moved to the genus Simia The orangutan was moved to the genus Pongo in 1799 by Lacepede Linnaeus s inclusion of humans in the primates with monkeys and apes was troubling for people who denied a close relationship between humans and the rest of the animal kingdom Linnaeus s Lutheran archbishop had accused him of impiety In a letter to Johann Georg Gmelin dated 25 February 1747 Linnaeus wrote It is not pleasing to me that I must place humans among the primates but man is intimately familiar with himself Let s not quibble over words It will be the same to me whatever name is applied But I desperately seek from you and from the whole world a general difference between men and simians from the principles of Natural History I certainly know of none If only someone might tell me one If I called man a simian or vice versa I would bring together all the theologians against me Perhaps I ought to in accordance with the law of Natural History 29 Accordingly Johann Friedrich Blumenbach in the first edition of his Manual of Natural History 1779 proposed that the primates be divided into the Quadrumana four handed i e apes and monkeys and Bimana two handed i e humans This distinction was taken up by other naturalists most notably Georges Cuvier Some elevated the distinction to the level of order However the many affinities between humans and other primates and especially the great apes made it clear that the distinction made no scientific sense In his 1871 book The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex Charles Darwin wrote The greater number of naturalists who have taken into consideration the whole structure of man including his mental faculties have followed Blumenbach and Cuvier and have placed man in a separate Order under the title of the Bimana and therefore on an equality with the orders of the Quadrumana Carnivora etc Recently many of our best naturalists have recurred to the view first propounded by Linnaeus so remarkable for his sagacity and have placed man in the same Order with the Quadrumana under the title of the Primates The justice of this conclusion will be admitted for in the first place we must bear in mind the comparative insignificance for classification of the great development of the brain in man and that the strongly marked differences between the skulls of man and the Quadrumana lately insisted upon by Bischoff Aeby and others apparently follow from their differently developed brains In the second place we must remember that nearly all the other and more important differences between man and the Quadrumana are manifestly adaptive in their nature and relate chiefly to the erect position of man such as the structure of his hand foot and pelvis the curvature of his spine and the position of his head 30 Changes in taxonomy and terminology See also Hominidae and Human taxonomy Humans the non apes Until about 1960 taxonomists typically divided the superfamily Hominoidea into two families The science community treated humans and their extinct relatives as the outgroup within the superfamily that is humans were considered as quite distant from kinship with the apes Humans were classified as the family Hominidae and were known as the hominids All other hominoids were known as apes and were referred to the family Pongidae 31 nbsp The great apes in Pongidae The 1960s saw the methodologies of molecular biology applied to primate taxonomy Goodman s 1964 immunological study of serum proteins led to re classifying the hominoids into three families the humans in Hominidae the great apes in Pongidae and the lesser apes gibbons in Hylobatidae 32 However this arrangement had two trichotomies Pan Gorilla and Pongo of the great apes in Pongidae and Hominidae Pongidae and Hylobatidae in Hominoidea These presented a puzzle scientists wanted to know which genus speciated first from the common hominoid ancestor nbsp Gibbons the outgroup New studies indicated that gibbons not humans are the outgroup within the superfamily Hominoidea meaning the rest of the hominoids are more closely related to each other than any of them are to the gibbons With this splitting the gibbons Hylobates et al were isolated after moving the great apes into the same family as humans Now the term hominid encompassed a larger collective taxa within the family Hominidae With the family trichotomy settled scientists could now work to learn which genus is least related to the others in the subfamily Ponginae nbsp Orangutans the outgroup Investigations comparing humans and the three other hominid genera disclosed that the African apes chimpanzees and gorillas and humans are more closely related to each other than any of them are to the Asian orangutans Pongo that is the orangutans not humans are the outgroup within the family Hominidae This led to reassigning the African apes to the subfamily Homininae with humans which presented a new three way split Homo Pan and Gorilla 33 nbsp Hominins In an effort to resolve the trichotomy while preserving the nostalgic outgroup status of humans the subfamily Homininae was divided into two tribes Gorillini comprising genus Pan and genus Gorilla and Hominini comprising genus Homo the humans Humans and close relatives now began to be known as hominins that is of the tribe Hominini Thus the term hominin succeeded to the previous use of hominid which meaning had changed with changes in Hominidae see above 3rd graphic Gibbons the outgroup nbsp Gorillas the outgroup New DNA comparisons now provided evidence that gorillas not humans are the outgroup in the subfamily Homininae this suggested that chimpanzees should be grouped with humans in the tribe Hominini but in separate subtribes 34 Now the name hominin delineated Homo plus those earliest Homo relatives and ancestors that arose after the divergence from the chimpanzees Humans are no longer recognized as an outgroup but are a branch deep in the tree of the pre 1960s ape group nbsp Speciation of gibbons Later DNA comparisons disclosed previously unknown speciation of genus Hylobates gibbons into four genera Hylobates Hoolock Nomascus and Symphalangus 24 27 The ordering of speciation of these four genera are being investigated as of 2022 update nbsp CharacteristicsThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Like those of the orangutan the shoulder joints of hominoids are adapted to brachiation or movement by swinging in tree branches The lesser apes are the gibbon family Hylobatidae of sixteen species all are native to Asia Their major differentiating characteristic is their long arms which they use to brachiate through trees Their wrists are ball and socket joints as an evolutionary adaptation to their arboreal lifestyle Generally smaller than the African apes the largest gibbon the siamang weighs up to 14 kg 31 lb in comparison the smallest great ape the bonobo is 34 to 60 kg 75 to 132 lb The superfamily Hominoidea falls within the parvorder Catarrhini which also includes the Old World monkeys of Africa and Eurasia Within this grouping the two families Hylobatidae and Hominidae can be distinguished from Old World monkeys by the number of cusps on their molars hominoids have five in the Y 5 molar pattern whereas Old World monkeys have only four in a bilophodont pattern Further in comparison with Old World monkeys hominoids are noted for more mobile shoulder joints and arms due to the dorsal position of the scapula broader ribcages that are flatter front to back and a shorter less mobile spine with greatly reduced caudal tail vertebrae resulting in complete loss of the tail in extant hominoid species These are anatomical adaptations first to vertical hanging and swinging locomotion brachiation and later to developing balance in a bipedal pose Note there are primates in other families that also lack tails and at least one the pig tailed langur is known to walk significant distances bipedally The front of the ape skull is characterised by its sinuses fusion of the frontal bone and by post orbital constriction Distinction from monkeys See also Monkey Historical and modern terminology Cladistically apes catarrhines and extinct species such as Aegyptopithecus and Parapithecidaea are monkeys citation needed so one can only specify ape features not present in other monkeys Unlike most monkeys apes do not possess a tail Monkeys are more likely to be in trees and use their tails for balance While the great apes are considerably larger than monkeys gibbons lesser apes are smaller than some monkeys Apes are considered to be more intelligent than monkeys which are considered to have more primitive brains 35 The enzyme urate oxidase has become inactive in all apes its function having been lost in two primate lineages during the middle Miocene first in the common ancestors of Hominidae and later in the common ancestor of Hylobatidae It has been hypothesized that in both incidents it was a mutation that occurred in apes living in Europe when the climate was getting colder leading to starvation during winter The mutation changed the biochemistry of the apes and made it easier to accumulate fat which allowed the animals to survive longer periods of starvation When they migrated to Asia and Africa this genetic trait remained 36 37 BehaviourMajor studies of behaviour in the field were completed on the three better known great apes for example by Jane Goodall Dian Fossey and Birute Galdikas These studies have shown that in their natural environments the non human hominoids show sharply varying social structure gibbons are monogamous territorial pair bonders orangutans are solitary gorillas live in small troops with a single adult male leader while chimpanzees live in larger troops with bonobos exhibiting promiscuous sexual behaviour Their diets also vary gorillas are foliovores while the others are all primarily frugivores although the common chimpanzee hunts for meat Foraging behaviour is correspondingly variable In November 2023 scientists reported for the first time evidence that groups of primates including apes and particularly bonobos are capable of cooperating with each other 38 39 Diet Apart from humans and gorillas apes eat a predominantly frugivorous diet mostly fruit but supplemented with a variety of other foods Gorillas are predominantly folivorous eating mostly stalks shoots roots and leaves with some fruit and other foods Non human apes usually eat a small amount of raw animal foods such as insects or eggs In the case of humans migration and the invention of hunting tools and cooking has led to an even wider variety of foods and diets with many human diets including large amounts of cooked tubers roots or legumes 40 Other food production and processing methods including animal husbandry and industrial refining and processing have further changed human diets 41 Humans and other apes occasionally eat other primates 42 Some of these primates are now close to extinction with habitat loss being the underlying cause 43 44 Cognition nbsp This series of images shows a gorilla using a small tree trunk as a tool The trunk is used to maintain balance while fishing for aquatic plantsAll the non human hominoids are generally thought of as highly intelligent and scientific study has broadly confirmed that they perform very well on a wide range of cognitive tests though there is relatively little data on gibbon cognition The early studies by Wolfgang Kohler demonstrated exceptional problem solving abilities in chimpanzees which Kohler attributed to insight The use of tools has been repeatedly demonstrated more recently the manufacture of tools has been documented both in the wild and in laboratory tests Imitation is much more easily demonstrated in great apes than in other primate species Almost all the studies in animal language acquisition have been done with great apes and though there is continuing dispute as to whether they demonstrate real language abilities there is no doubt that they involve significant feats of learning Chimpanzees in different parts of Africa have developed tools that are used in food acquisition demonstrating a form of animal culture 45 See also nbsp Mammals portal Dawn of Humanity 2015 PBS film International Primate Day List of individual apes for notable non fictional non human apes List of fictional primates List of primates by population World Declaration on Great Apes from the Great Ape ProjectNotes Although Dawkins is clear that he uses apes for Hominoidea he also uses great apes in ways which exclude humans Thus in Dawkins 2005 Long before people thought in terms of evolution great apes were often confused with humans p 114 gibbons are faithfully monogamous unlike the great apes which are our closer relatives p 126 The hypothetical Proto Germanic form is given as apōn F Kluge Etymologisches Worterbuch der Deutschen Sprache 2002 online version s v Affe V Orel A handbook of Germanic etymology 2003 s v apōn or as apa n Online Etymology Dictionary 2001 2014 s v ape M Philippa F Debrabandere A Quak T Schoonheim amp N van der Sijs Etymologisch woordenboek van het Nederlands 2003 2009 s v aap Perhaps ultimately derived from a non Indo European language the word might be a direct borrowing from Celtic or perhaps from Slavic although in both cases it is also argued that the borrowing if it took place went in the opposite direction Any simian known on the Mediterranean during the Middle Ages monkey or ape cf ape ward a juggler who keeps a trained monkey for the amusement of the crowd Middle English Dictionary s v ape Dawkins 2005 for example a ll apes except humans are hairy p 99 a mong the apes gibbons are second only to humans p 126 Definitions of paraphyly vary for the one used here see e g Stace 2010 pp 106 Definitions of monophyly vary for the one used here see e g Mishler 2009 pp 114References Gray J E An outline of an attempt at the disposition of Mammalia into tribes and families with a list of the genera apparently appertaining to each tribe Annals of Philosophy New Series 10 337 344 Archived from the original on 27 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2000PNAS 9710684P doi 10 1073 pnas 210390497 PMC 34045 PMID 10995486 Agreement between cladograms based on molecular and anatomical data Human Timeline Interactive Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History August 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ape amp oldid 1192481613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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