Publication | Open Access
Inheritance of color vision in a New World monkey (Saimiri sciureus).
141
Citations
12
References
1987
Year
PrimatologyGeneticsPrimate SystematicsSquirrel MonkeysRetinaMammalogyRetinal Gross PotentialPrimate BehaviorOphthalmologyMedicineGenetic VariationNew World MonkeyVertebrate VisionPopulation GeneticsColor ConstancyBiologyPhotoreceptor CellNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologySaimiri SciureusColor VisionAnimal Behavior
Squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) have a striking color-vision polymorphism; each animal has one of six different types of color vision. These arise from individual variation in the presence of three different middle- to long-wavelength cone pigments. The distribution of cone phenotypes was established for a large sample of squirrel monkeys, including several families, through analysis of a retinal gross potential. The results indicate that the inheritance of color vision in the squirrel monkey can be explained by assuming that the three middle- to long-wavelength cone pigments are specified by three alleles at a single locus on the X chromosome. This arrangement is discretely different from that found in Old World monkeys and humans.
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