Mainland versus Island Adaptation: Paleobiogeography of Sunda Shelf Primates Revisited

Southeast Asian primates appear to be one of the most successful mammals in the dynamic paleoclimatic changes since at least 1 mya. Human and non-human primates reflect the complex history of a wide range of ecological and geographic variation, which presents to be the source of different systematics and biogeographic models. The past combinative effects of geographic factors (latitude, bathymetric barrier, and duration of island isolation), periodic sea level changes, and the contribution of human and/or non-human primate interaction are crucial subjects in studying the north-to-south, which is from continental to archipelago of Sunda Shelf, dispersal events and phylogeographic analysis of human and non-human primates. Cranial size and shape difference between Homo erectus in mainland and island displays peculiarity on the effect of insularity. Data analyses on cranial landmarks of three non-human primate genera provide more clear resolu-tion to reconstruct the complete scenario, whereby insular primates are dispersed and adapted to their present biogeographical distribution. ,


Introduction
Mainland and island are two unique bodies of landmasses that hold not only the obvious different area dimension but also a timeline that portrayed dynamic changes on their geographical and ecological features. Southeast Asia that comprises mainland and the patches of island is a home for the primate species diversity with high rate of endemism and provinciality [1]. Since the emergence of primates in the region during Quaternary to recent, 13 genera have been taxonomically recognized: Homo, Pongo, Hylobates, Symphalangus, Nomascus, Hoolock, Macaca, Trachypithecus, Presbytis, Simias, Nasalis, Nycticebus, and Tarsius [2]. With the high variability on body mass and body size, Southeast Asian primates, both the mainland and island populations, remain enigmatic when confronted toward ecogeographical "rules," resulting positive [3], contradictive [4,5], and inconsistent results [6]. However, given their peculiarity in adaptive functional characters among other mammal taxa and their close evolutionary trajectory to human [7], primates share similarities showing their capability in grasping object [2] for faster food procurement and high occasional flexibility in locomotion (e.g., arboreal quadrupedalism, terrestrial quadrupedalism, and bipedalism) [2,8] These functional characters support their high adaptability in predator avoidance and alternate dietary shifts when resources are limited [9].
Lying over a wide range of latitude and various sizes of islands, the Southeast Asian region is frequently subjected for the studies of primate insularity that involved spatial factors (e.g., island size, latitude, and island-mainland distance) [3][4][5]10] and temporal factors (e.g., isolation duration and geological chronology) [5]. Insularity on primates is an interesting phenomenon that invites many reports, linking to their ecomorphological complex (body size and body shape) [6] and biodiversity changes [11].
In many ecological aspects, mainland environment differs from island environment. In addition, large-sized island provides different ecological scenarios from small-sized island. Certain duration of isolation on a relatively small island may lead to limited resources, fewer predators, and reduced interspecific competition [12]. Although it is not impacted universally, the combinative geographical effects on island size and island isolation can promote gigantism in smaller insular mammal species and dwarfism in larger mammal species. It is widely known as island rule (=Foster's rule) [6,[13][14][15][16][17][18]. With the wide span of latitudinal range, primates inhabiting the Sunda Shelf region are also assumed to follow Bergmann's rule, by testing the effect of latitudinal position to body size [3][4][5]. This study aims to elicit the validity of ecogeographical rules affected body size and biodiversity changes of primates around Sunda Shelf throughout the geological chronology, since their appearance in Quaternary until recent.

Mainland vs. island: impacts and consequences 2.1 Body size
Among mammal taxa, the record of body size shift has not been found spectacular in all primate species [19]. Before the Quaternary, the primate fossil records adapted to island rule are found in Madagascar and Caribbean islands. Strepsirrhine primates found in Madagascar (e.g., Archaeoindris fontoynontii and Megaladapis edwardsi) are known to have become gigantic [20], while an extinct dwarf lemur, Cheirogaleus spp., is known to occupy Nosy Hara Island, a small islet off the northwest coast of Madagascar [21]. The specific examples of island gigantism are also found in platyrrhine monkeys, such as Paralouatta mariane from Cuba [22] and Xenothrix mcgregori from Jamaica [23].
Hominine taxa represented by the Homo floresiensis [25] and Homo luzonensis (judging from the small-sized molar [26]) have become the object of comparison to their predicted common ancestor, Homo erectus, who inhabited a large-sized island (Java) and Asian continent (Zhoukoudian, China) [24][25][26]. Until recent, there is no evidence of gigantism found on Southeast Asian insular primates. Looking upon their localities, it shows that the island rule on primates likely occurs in a warmer area within the latitudinal span approaching equator. Throughout several reports [6] island rule on insular primates causing body size change is more evident in oceanic islands due to the deep bathymetric barrier from the mainland regardless of their short island-mainland distance (e.g., Madagascar Island and Mentawai Island) [12].
Gained with the fact that three primate genera (Macaca, Presbytis, and Hylobates) stand as the most widely distributed taxa over Sunda Shelf islands, an attempt is conducted to compare the body size profile between living populations in mainland and island, addressing that an island, regardless of their various sizes, bathymetric barrier, and distance to mainland, is assumed to generate body size changes or body shape variation. Three-dimensional measurements were employed on 20 landmark points on lateral crania (Figure 1, Table 1, Table 2) of five species that strictly inhabit mainland and island (Hylobates lar, Hylobates agilis, Macaca fascicularis, DOI: http://dx.doi.org /10.5772/intechopen.90051 Macaca nemestrina, Presbytis femoralis). The landmark points were obtained using 3D digitizer (MicroScribe MX; Immersion Corp., San Jose, CA) and translated into centroid size that stands as alternative check to compensate spatial size over twodimensional size (Figure 2).
The box and whisker plot diagrams (Figure 3) exhibit two distinction profiles between Hylobatidae and Cercopithecidae. Island populations of H. lar and H. agilis show smaller craniolateral size to the mainland population. Noting that most island Hylobatidae population inhabits large-sized islands (Sumatra, Borneo, and Java); their comparatively smaller craniolateral size is seemingly hard to be explained by island rule, knowing that they occupy large-sized islands with shallow bathymetric barrier to the mainland. The presence of much higher-canopy rain forest in mainland may contribute to large-sized body proportion of Hylobates in mainland. The reversed results profiled in Cercopithecidae (M. fascicularis, M. nemestrina, and P. femoralis) (Figure 3). Given that Southeast Asian islands   Table 2.
Abbreviation and definition used in this study [28].  are geographically characterized with various sizes, latitudinal and longitudinal positions, maximum sea depth, and island-mainland distance, this condition arises to a consequence on more diverse insular adaptation that contributes to numerous variations in body size.

Biodiversity changes and extinction
For the last 30 years, benefited by the advanced methodology of molecular biology, the expansion of studies on primates of Southeast Asia have resulted in the increased number of taxonomic diversification [29][30][31], which was previously mostly explained by the superficial character (e.g., pelage color, tail length, and behavior) on the living taxa [2,5]. Mainland and large islands have been claimed to correspond to the higher taxonomic diversity than islands [32]. With the wide span of area, mainland and large islands have a great advantage to develop more topographic diversity, formed as geographic barriers (e.g., peak, valley, river), linking to high possibility to allopatric speciation [33].
Principal component analyses (PCA) on the craniolateral shape of the five species share similarities in the wider shape variance of all three insular species (Figure 4). The mixed category between large-sized island and small-sized island in this study ( Table 3) may strongly correspond to the higher craniolateral morphology, by considering (i) each isolated small island with unique geographicalecological condition and different degrees of isolation may contribute to the shape modification, furthermore to endemism [12]; (ii) large islands may lead to various shape modifications, generated by various topographic-diversity-derived habitat variations [33]. Reflecting the wide variance morphology on three insular genera of this study, insularity does not gain merely on taxonomic diversity; furthermore strong individual differentiation within population or intraspecific variation could also possibly generated.
The isolation process on an island may lead to enforce the possibility of extinction in certain species [31]. For example, in Java Island, with area span 138,000 km 2 , three primate species (Homo erectus, Pongo pygmaeus, and M. nemestrina) occurred during Middle-Late Pleistocene, but finally disappeared [34] (Table 4). Harsh ecological condition (e.g., low carnivore-herbivore ratio and habitat change) on island will contribute to the adaptability of particular species. M. nemestrina, which is more terrestrial species than the survived species, M. fascicularis [28] (Table 4), is assumed to be less adaptive to avoid terrestrial and predators. Pongo, which is recently absent in Java Island and    Pleistocene Archaeology -Migration, Technology, and Adaptation 8 3. Synthesis and discussion 3.1 Spatial cost: do primates follow ecogeographical rules in mainland and islands?

Bergmann's rule
Southeast Asia with wide span of latitude ranging from 6°N to 14°S is split by the equator line, demanding at least two comprehensive separations that require thermoregulation connection from the equator to southern and northern latitudes. Mammals of mainland Southeast Asia have been subjected to describe body size variation following thermoregulation effect, widely termed as Bergmann's rule [6]. Concluding that Bergmann's rule may occur within a species, it predicts that population in warmer climates (commonly referred to lower latitudes) have smaller mean body size than conspecifics in colder climates (generally marked with higher latitude) [6]. Published accounts applying this ecogeographical rule on non-human primates has been intensively investigated in the widely distributed species in Southeast Asia: M. fascicularis [4,5,10] and M. nemestrina [3]. The Bergmann's rule was positively performed on northern pig-tailed macaques (M. leonina) [3,6] and crab-eating macaques (M. fascicularis) [4,5,10] in the mainland, demonstrated by the increasing body size toward higher latitude.
Interestingly, anti-Bergmann's rule appears north side of Kra Isthmus (the narrowest area differing Indochinese mainland and Malay Peninsula at 12.2°N) [4,5]. Explanatory cause for this inversed Bergmann's rule has not been uncovered. In response to this matter, M. fascicularis population from the northeastern localities that is bound by the geographic barrier of north-south oriented high topographic range of Tenasserim Hills most likely underwent different and unique ecomorphological adaptations to the rest of the western low land area of Indochinese mainland population. Due to the limitation number on available samples, to date, there is no further study testing this ecogeographical rule in this species or in other non-human primate taxa.
Although serious attempts to test Bergmann's rule on insular non-human primates have increased, the result of the statistical analysis on the cranial size of southern pig-tailed macaque (M. nemestrina) surprisingly demonstrates anti-Bergmann's rule [3]. However, insular M. fascicularis tested in western Southeast Asian archipelago [4,5,10] and large-sized islands of Sunda Shelf still shows constant Bergmann's rule [28]. Taken together from observed results correlating non-human primate body size to thermoregulation mechanism in Southeast Asian archipelago, they frequently came as debatable subjects [6] because (i) most islands are situated in short range of latitudinal position referring to low temperature variation; (ii) the equator line that passes over or nearby most of the islands, both northward and southward, directs to similar typical tropical habitat; and (iii) each island is addressed to various unique insular geographical properties (e.g., island area, max. Depth separating to mainland, and island-island distance), which likely gives the stronger island effect than the latitude effect to the population. This aspect needs a more complicated operation when we apply Bergmann's rule in islands than in mainland.

Foster's rule
In the context of conservative classification on island area, primate insularity has been investigated into categorization of area size, e.g., small and large island, which was directly calculated by metric size of island [32]. This ecogeographical rule implemented exclusively on island, commonly known as Foster's rule, proposes that population of large-bodied mammals on island tend to have a smaller mean body size than mainland population (dwarfism), while small-bodied mammals become larger (gigantism) [6]. One suggested that, in the scope of insularity on Southeast Asian mammals, the small island criterion is defined by the island size <12.000 km 2 [35] (Table 3). Without providing the specific primate species group, one suggested that primates follow island rule [19]. However, a study tested in body length of Macaca fascicularis found that island area and body length shows no significant relationship [10].
The most spectacular evidences of dwarfism on extinct Homininae taxa are Homo floresiensis aged 60,000-100,000 years ago in oceanic island of Flores, Indonesia [11,25], and Homo luzonensis (judging from the small molar) aged 66.700 ± 1000 years ago discovered in Callao Cave, Luzon Island, Philippines [26]. The consideration of island rule causing diminutive character on Homo luzonensis remains enigmatic, since Luzon Island is a large island ( Table 3). However, the coexisted fossil macaque, M. f. philippinensis, which still occurs in modern western, eastern, and northern islands of the Philippines, suggests that it occupied the island since 160,000 years ago [5]. It permits the long duration of isolation that impacted not necessarily on body size reduction, but the possibility of endemism. Furthermore, insular dwarfisms that were reported on M. fascicularis in Bintan Island and Singapore are possibly caused by ecological effects, such as food limitation and high population density [6], not geographical effect such as island size.
Among gibbons, diminutive body size has been presented by Hylobates klossii, an endemic species of four Mentawai islands (Siberut, Sipora, North Pagai, and South Pagai). There are few gibbons occupying small-sized island in continental Sunda Shelf (only found in Paku Island, collection of Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum), because the small island usually tends to do not support the development of dense rain forest habitat with high canopy cover where gibbon is dependable to live [35].
Researchers have long endeavored to uncover the Foster's rule in Southeast Asian archipelago [4,5,10], but most outcomes show no statistically significant results [11]. On exclusively M. fascicularis inhabiting shallow-water fringing islands over Sunda Shelf, small-sized island was found to contribute more to the variation of subspecies [4,5] ( Table 3). The implementation only using island size or the distance between island and mainland as a proxy is unlikely relevant to the test of Foster's rule in Southeast Asian archipelago, neither. Deep bathymetric barrier possessed by oceanic islands ( Table 3) convincingly appears as the main factor of island rule, followed by the unique island ecological condition in the duration of island isolation.

Vicariance biogeography
Mainland Southeast Asia contains the high variation of non-human primate species. Recent molecular biological studies revealed critical systematics of non-human primates (i.e., Macaca [29,30] and Hylobates [31]), showing the high intra-and interspecific variation. Topographic diversity in mainland Asia is likely correlated to the speciation process of animals [11,37], and islands are not exception for this correlation. Historical change of paleobiogeography in large-sized islands (Sumatra, Java, and Borneo) over Sunda Shelf can be explained by Pleistocene volcanic activities caused by the geologic subduction between Sunda and Australian Plates.
In Java, a chain of 38 mountains forming east-west spine with various slopes, illustrated by jagged highlands by alternating peaks and valleys, leads to classes of topographic diversity [37]. This phenomenon led the geographically separated populations to undergo allopatric speciation. According to the modern Javanese mammal fauna, the low topographic diversity in East Java resulted in less Homo erectus S17 [26] Sangiran, Java 0.78-1.3 Homo erectus S12 [26] Sangiran, Java 1.2-0.98 variation in endemic mammals than in the West and Central Java. This topographic profile is supported by the presence of two endemic non-human primate species/subspecies strictly occupying western Java forests; Hylobates moloch and Trachypithecus auratus auratus. This endemism also shows the high correlation with the number of natural parks in West and Central Java [33], which probably corresponds to the high soil fertility rates gained from the high-contained mineral of the eruption sediments. Conversely, a higher endemic mammal species diversity was more visible in East Java during the Middle Pleistocene, in the stage of Stegodon-Homo erectus [33]. Two Hominoidae taxa, Gigantopithecus sp. [38] and Homo erectus, co-existed in the eastern part of the island during the Middle Pleistocene (Table 4). It is also followed by the known primate fossils, including Trachypithecus auratus, Presbytis comata, M. nemestrina, M. fascicularis, Hylobates sp., and later Pongo pygmaeus in the Late Pleistocene [34,48]. All cercopithecid species are comparable to extant species inhabiting Java Island, while Hominoidae taxa are all extinct. Gigantopithecus sp., Homo erectus, Pongo pygmaeus, and M. nemestrina, which have disappeared in recent Java Island, are assumed to indicate the incapability to adapt toward paleoclimatic changes resulting in habitat loss or ecological replacement from rain forest to open woodland and possible human intervention such as hunting. Although this result is likely related to excavation bias where most of the archeological localities are located in East Java [33,39], the possible intraspecific variation is reported in Homo erectus, which is commonly discovered in eastern Java localities, specifically as craniodental specimens [26].
With the numerous Homo erectus findings in Java Islands, it leads to the high morphological diversity [26] exclusively on cranial morphology. A comprehensive study on comparison of Homo erectus cranial morphology between island and mainland population has been investigated showing the peculiar distinction on mainland vs. island population. Zhoukoudian Homo erectus represents mainland population ( Table 4), and the common ancestor of Javan Homo erectus demonstrates a less morphological variability to the Early Pleistocene Java Homo erectus (that mostly unearthed in Sangiran Dome), while Late-Middle Pleistocene Javan Homo erectus are reported to share similarities in cranial shape [26]. It is suggestive that the lower habitat vicariance in mainland during Middle Pleistocene and Java Island during Middle-Late Pleistocene indicates less genetic isolation. Taking this into account, geographic barriers such as volcanic mountains, added with the isolation of Java, might enforce high intraspecific variation during Early-Middle Pleistocene, supported by the extensive paleoclimatic change. Out of Sunda Shelf, the obvious record of this mechanism appears in Wallacea non-human primates inhabiting Sulawesi. High bathymetric boundaries to Sunda Shelf and the islands surrounding, and diversed topographic barrier of Sulawesi contributes to six endemic macaque species; Macaca nigra, Macaca tonkeana, Macaca maura, Macaca nigrescens, Macaca ochreata, and Macaca hecki that some of the species were found in the archeological cave Leang Burung 2 that occupied with the early human occupation on the island in Late Pleistocene.

Duration
Time by duration and particular period falls to the temporal scope of inhabitation of certain population on island is pronounced to impact body size evolution [12]. Higher duration of island isolation increases the chance for ecological release to influence functional characters (e.g., diet, locomotion, and bauplan) among species. The report on paleoinsular mammals has claimed that body size shift on island mammal species occurred when residence time reached more than 10,000 years [12]. While the evidences are prominently strong on terrestrial herbivores, including terrestrial primates (e.g., Homo floresiensis, 60,000-100,000 years ago [24]), it also evidently impacts the arboreal non-human primate species or subspecies (e.g., Macaca fascicularis and endemic primate species on Simeulue, Lasia, Nicobar, Mentawai Islands). DOI: http://dx.doi.org /10.5772/intechopen.90051 Typically expressed by the estimated dispersal chronology in Southeast Asian Archipelago, duration of island isolation shows the function of maximum sea depth separating island from mainland or neighboring large island, mainly in small-sized island. Some oceanic islands in the region (Simeulue, Lasia, Siberut, Sipora, North Pagai, South Pagai) remarked with bathymetric barrier more than 120 m (Figure 1) display clear effect of isolation than the shallow-water fringing island over Sunda Shelf. The shallow depth of Sunda Shelf sea floor (0-40 m) allows the emergence of exposed dry land that permits colonization, reversed colonization, or recolonization of the island which most commonly occur during the sea level drop during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), which reduces the optimum genetic isolation.
On the level of subspecies, the long duration of island isolation appears to indicate the development of new intraspecific features in Macaca fascicularis inhabiting oceanic islands. Estimated from the last connection with the progenitor mainland species ca. 160 ka (gained from recent bathymetric barrier), some oceanic islands

Changes through time
According to the previous paleontological works on mammal evolution of Southeast Asia, there is no fossil evidence of primates before ca. 0.9 Ma in Java Island. The first colonization of primates to Java is estimated to occur at the end of Early Pleistocene, when Sunda Shelf fully emerged and then periodically entered Java via Siva-Malayan corridor route during Middle Pleistocene [34]. Along with the balanced mammal association, including Homo erectus, this period seemingly shows the suitable ecological condition for arboreal high-adapted non-human primates (Macaca, Trachypithecus, and Presbytis) to adapt to mainly open woodlands in relatively dry climate condition [34]. The long duration allowing the dry landmass that connected recent mainland and island during this period possibly permits the occupation access for a hominine species (elaborated as Homo cf. floresiensis [36]) to inhabit the oceanic island of Flores.
To date, there is no chronological and geographical comparative study demonstrating body size of non-human primates between fossils and recent on Java Island. It rather revealed the similarities on morphological characters in accordance with the attempt in determining species. So, it was difficult to answer whether Middle Pleistocene non-human primates of Java are the continuously highly adapted species until recent or the extinct species that disappeared in the Middle Pleistocene like other mammals (including Homo erectus).
Late Pleistocene displays the rise of tropical rain forest non-human primates (Hylobates and Pongo) to develop in Sunda Shelf where the Chinese origin fauna enter to exhibit similar association to recent fauna [34]. Primate species/subspecies that became native to some oceanic islands (e.  [5]) and large island-mainland distance, dispersal route to the oceanic island is most likely through corridor route over dry landmass, furthermore by passive dispersal, such as natural rafting [5]. The dispersal scenario passing deep sea barrier to reach oceanic islands of Lesser Sunda presumably occurred by human transport during <4.5 ka [5], because swimming is not possible due to the strong sea current in Lombok Strait. This data is supported by the presence of M. fascicularis remains in archeological cave aged ca. 7 ka in Timor Island [5,28].

Fauna association
With limited connection to the diverse mainland fauna, isolated island promotes the poor taxonomic diversity and the imbalanced rate between herbivores and carnivores. Small island has been claimed to reduce the sympatric speciation than large island [32]. This condition drove a disharmonic inter-and intraspecific variation [12]. For instance, in severe ecological condition when food resources are limited in long duration, the large-bodied species tends to expand their territory where small-bodied species fails to compete and being enforced to undergo stronger dietary adaptation. This response to ecological condition led to a radiation into different size classes and morphotypes, which arrives to appear in the form such as anatomical modification (e.g., dental pattern, size, and shape of limb bone) causing genetic radiation [12].
In most case, this disharmonic taxonomic diversity condition dropped the survivability. The heavily impoverished condition leads to some species to extinction, for example, in all Late Pliocene-Early Pleistocene (Sinomastodon-Megalochelys stage) species in Java and large-to intermediate-bodied fauna in Flores Island in Late Pleistocene. It is followed by imbalanced condition where the normal ratio between carnivores and herbivores is high. Predator avoidance is suggested to cause the limb bone modification. A species that is not threatened by the carnivores might not often walk and run leading to the less development of limb bones.

Vegetation
The vegetation type of an area derives from mean temperature caused from latitudinal position, geographical topography, seasonality by monsoon, and geological sediments. During Quaternary, the fluctuating temperature prominently contributes to habitat changes. The ecological shift from tropical rainforest to more open environment in Early-Mid Holocene resulted in biodiversity loss in nonhuman primates; for example, it is shown by the disappearance of Presbytis comata (Javan langur) in eastern Java that was previously found in Braholo Cave, East Java (Late Pleistocene to Mid Holocene) [49], and the extinction of Pongo in Java that was formerly discovered in Punung rockshelter, East Java (Late Pleistocene) [41,43]. This open environment niches created the mosaic ecological niche in eastern Java [49] that enforced the early Homo sapiens inhabiting Java to hunt the remaining arboreal fauna including non-human primates as food resources. Archeological evidence depicting Homo sapiens that consumed monkeys (Macaca, Presbytis, and Trachypithecus) are also discovered in Song Terus cave in the period from 9000 to 5000 years ago [50] and Niah Cave, Borneo [51]. Further ethnographic account resembling this phenomenon is found as butchery marks and burnt bone fragments on cercopithecids assemblage in Punan Vuhang, Sarawak, Borneo [52].

Conclusions
1. Prefigured by many geographic properties, bathymetric barrier presents to appear as the strongest casual effect in enforcing island isolation in Southeast DOI: http://dx.doi.org /10.5772/intechopen.90051 Asian Archipelago, expressed by the high degree of endemism in level of species in oceanic islands (i.e., Homo floresiensis in Flores Island and six non-human primates in Mentawai Islands). Vicariance geography in any form of barriers (e.g., mountain and river) could create allopatric speciation or endemism; however bathymetric barrier on island extraordinarily emerged in different process. The higher sea depth caused the higher chance for island population to disconnect more to the original continental population.
2. The duration of island isolation widens to promote the evolutionary results that yield the island ecological mechanism becoming intensified. The higher time cost on ecological factors such as selective pressures and predator avoidance could escalate the chance for anatomical feature to be modified. Although it is hard to know the absolute duration of island isolation, the relative isolation can be seen from the present bathymetry showing the predicted terminal time for body of water to cover the maximum depth that stop the connection from mainland to surrounding islands. Constituted by this concept, oceanic islands with high bathymetric barrier will definitely prolong the disconnection signal from mainland than continental islands.
3. When we control geographical and chronological isolation factors, the two main island ecosystem factors, faunal association and vegetation type, strongly contribute to the change of body size and shape, resulting in a higher island effect. Patterns impacted by this ecosystem factors are not the same in all islands. The imbalanced condition on fauna between the number of herbivores and carnivores and less interspecific faunal diversity could lead to the body size shift and anatomical modification. On primates, oceanic islands located near the equator covered with the densely tropical rain forest gave less likely island effect (e.g., Mentawai Island and Simeulue Island) than in oceanic island with drier and more open environment where resource is less abundantly available (e.g., Flores Island).
4. Latitudinal factor is clear to be seen in the mainland. While each island holds unique geographical properties directing to isolation (e.g., bathymetric barrier and island size), most Southeast Asian islands that are located around the equator with tropical weather resulting in major rain forest cover and short latitudinal range rather rise to contribute to more diverse body size and body shape longitudinally. Thus, Bergmann's rule is seemingly irrelevant to be evaluated in such condition.
5. The primates of Sunda Shelf occupying the great number of islands scattered in large scale area did not perform any pattern in regard to correlation between body size and island size. Potential causal relation to island size is more manifested in the increasing taxonomic diversity. Large-sized islands throughout Sunda Shelf hold higher diversity in anatomical variation than in small-sized island. It is supposedly due to the combination of possible isolation-derived process by geographic or ecological barrier and the resiliency of relict species along many stages of period. This circumstance is conceivably reassured from the Quaternary through recent, for example, the high diversity of calvarium morphology seen in Homo erectus of Java Island and the occurrence of four varied living Presbytis species in Borneo Island.
6. Endemism featured on non-human primates in continental islands of Sunda Shelf mostly direct to the resilience of relict groups occupying the island, not