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Dietary Niche Overlap: Tetonius (Primates), Xestops and Suzanniwana (Squamata) During the Early Eocene (~56-52 Ma)

Dietary Niche Overlap: Tetonius (Primates), Xestops and Suzanniwana (Squamata) During the Early Eocene (~56-52 Ma)
Dietary Niche Overlap: Tetonius (Primates), Xestops and Suzanniwana (Squamata) During the Early Eocene (~56-52 Ma)

Category: Research Poster

Author(s): Sami Conca

Presenter(s): Sami Conca

Mentors(s): Kimberly Nichols

In the early Eocene (56-52 Ma), the Bighorn Basin of Wyoming supported a rich, tropical environment and variety of small, faunivorous vertebrates comparable to modern taxa. This ancient environment included the primate genus Tetonius, analogous to modern tarsiers. In addition, this environment supported the extinct lizards Xestops and Suzanniwana, which have adaptations similar to extant small terrestrial squamates with crushing dentition and arboreal iguanians, respectively, and inhabit environments alongside each other today. Identification of specimens of Tetonius, Xestops, and Suzanniwana in the CSU Primate Origins Lab Paleontology Field School fossil collection form the basis for: (1) the examination of dietary niche overlap; and (2) possible predation between the three genera. Analysis of topological dentition, paleoenvironmental modelling, determination of modern morphologically similar genera, and review of modern tarsier-squamate interactions provides evidence of the relationship, and potential overlap, in dietary and feeding environments of Tetonius, Xestops, and Suzanniwana, including the possibility that Tetonius preyed upon the lizards. Examination of overlapping dietary niches and similar, but morphologically distinct, adaptations provides insight into prehistoric analogs for extant primate and squamate interactions and how that relationship has been maintained. This research has applications to primatology, functional morphology, and conservation.