Tarsiidae
| Tarsier |
 |
| Scientific classification |
|
|
| Species |
Tarsius bancanus
Tarsius dianae
Tarsius pelengensis
Tarsius pumilus
Tarsius sangirensis
Tarsius spectrum
Tarsius syrichta
|
| WikiProjects: | Life, Primates |
|
Tarsiers (family Tarsiidae, genus Tarsius) are a genus of primates, previously classified as prosimians, but now classified as haplorhines, though still not considered to be monkeys. Tarsiers have enormous eyes and long feet. They are insectivorous, and catch insects by jumping at them. They are named for the tarsus, which is part of the foot.
- ORDER PRIMATES
- Suborder Strepsirhini: non-tarsier prosimians
- Suborder Haplorhini: tarsiers, monkeys and apes
Referenced By
Callitrichidae | Cebid | Cebidae | Cercopithecidae | Gibbon | Haplorhini | Homididae | Hominid | Hominidae | Hominids | Hominoidae | MammaLia | Mammal | Mammals | Monkey | Monkeys | Old World monkeys | Pongidae | Primata | Primate | Primate (biology) | Primates | Tarsier | Tarsiidae | Tarsius bancanus | Tarsius dianae | Tarsius pumilus | Tarsius spectrum | Tarsius syrichta
|