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    Simia

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    In his Systema Naturae of 1758, Carolus Linnaeus divided the Order Primates into four genera: Homo, Simia, Lemur, and Vespertilio. His Vespertilio included all bats, and has since been moved from Primates to Chiroptera.[1] Homo contained humans (Homo sapiens and Homo troglodytes), Lemur contained four lemurs and a colugo, and Simia contained all the rest — it was, in modern terms, a wastebasket taxon for the primates. It is interesting to note that Linnaeus did not think that Homo should form a distinct group from Simia, but he classified them that way primarily to avoid conflict with religious authorities. If we take this into account, Simia (including Homo) would be roughly equivalent to the Suborder Haplorrhini of the Primates (while Lemur would be roughly equivalent to the Suborder Strepsirrhini).

    Homo, Lemur, and Vespertilio have survived as generic names, but Simia has not. All the species have since been moved to other genera, and in 1929, the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature ruled (in opinion 114) that Simia be suppressed. However, the genus Simias is valid and contains a single species, the Pig-tailed Langur (Simias concolor).

    The original genus Simia came to include these species:

    Modern genus Modern common name Original scientific name
    Tarsius Storr, 1780 Philippine Tarsier Simia syrichta Linnaeus, 1758
    Callithrix Erxleben, 1777 Silvery Marmoset Simia argentata Linnaeus, 1771
    Common Marmoset Simia jacchus Linnaeus, 1758
    Leontopithecus Lesson, 1840 Golden Lion Tamarin Simia rosalia Linnaeus, 1766
    Saguinus Hoffmannsegg, 1807 Red-handed Tamarin Simia midas Linnaeus, 1758
    Cottontop Tamarin Simia oedipus Linnaeus, 1758
    Cebus Erxleben, 1777 White-fronted Capuchin Simia albifrons Humboldt, 1812
    White-headed Capuchin Simia capucina Linnaeus, 1758
    Tufted Capuchin Simia apella Linnaeus, 1758
    Simia fatuellus Linnaeus, 1766
    Saimiri Voigt, 1831 Common Squirrel Monkey Simia sciurea Linnaeus, 1758
    Alouatta Lacépède, 1799 Red-handed Howler Simia belzebul Linnaeus, 1766
    Venezuelan Red Howler Simia seniculus Linnaeus, 1766
    Ateles É. Geoffroy, 1806 Red-faced Spider Monkey Simia paniscus Linnaeus, 1758
    Lagothrix É. Geoffroy, 1812 Brown Woolly Monkey Simia lagotricha Humboldt, 1812
    Pithecia Desmarest, 1804 White-faced Saki Simia pithecia Linnaeus, 1766
    Chiropotes Lesson, 1840 Black Bearded Saki Simia chiropotes Humboldt, 1812
    Callicebus Thomas, 1903 Black Titi Simia lugens Humboldt, 1812?
    Atlantic Titi Simia personatus É. Geoffroy, 1812
    Chlorocebus Gray, 1870 Grivet Simia aethiops Linnaeus, 1766
    Green Monkey Simia sabacea Linnaeus, 1766
    Cercopithecus Linnaeus, 1758
    (named as a subsection of Simia)
    Moustached Guenon Simia cephus Linnaeus, 1758
    Diana Monkey Simia diana Linnaeus, 1758
    Simia faunus Linnaeus, 1758
    Greater Spot-nosed Monkey Simia nictitans Linnaeus, 1766
    Macaca Lacépède, 1799 Crab-eating Macaque Simia aygula Linnaeus, 1758
    Barbary Macaque ?Simia cynamolgus Linnaeus, 1758
    ?Simia cynomolgus Linnaeus, 1766
    Simia inuus Linnaeus, 1766
    Simia sylvanus Linnaeus, 1758
    Southern Pig-tailed Macaque Simia nemestrina Linnaeus, 1766
    Lion-tailed Macaque Simia silenus Linnaeus, 1758
    Toque Macaque Simia sinica Linnaeus, 1771
    Papio Erxleben, 1777 Hamadryas Baboon Simia hamadryas Linnaeus, 1758
    Yellow Baboon Simia cynocephalus Linnaeus, 1758
    Mandrillus Ritgen, 1824 Mandrill Simia sphynx Linnaeus, 1758
    Simia maimon Linnaeus, 1766
    Pygathrix É. Geoffroy, 1812 Red-shanked Douc Simia nemaeus Linnaeus, 1771
    Pongo Lacépède, 1799 Bornean Orangutan Simia pygmaeus Linnaeus, 1760
    Simia satyrus Linnaeus, 1758
    Pan Oken, 1816 Common Chimpanzee Simia satyrus Linnaeus, 1758
    Simia troglodytes Blumenbach, 1775
    (unknown) Simia apedia Linnaeus, 1758
    Simia morta Linnaeus, 1758
    Simia trepida Linnaeus, 1766
    Simia veter Linnaeus, 1766

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    Autorem skryptu AdWiki v0.8 (2007) jest husky83
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