Snouts, muzzles, and noses
The reduction of the snout in primates is a correlate of the diminution of the sense of smell, or olfaction. To a great extent, visual acuity and manual dexterity have replaced the sensitive, inquiring nose found in so many nonprimate mammals. A marked reduction in the complexity of the nasal concha (“scroll” bones of the nose), the richness of the innervation of the olfactory mucous membrane, and the sensitivity of the moist tip of the nose—the rhinarium—are associated with the reduction in length of the primate snout. Still, although the trend in primate evolution is toward a dethronement of the primacy of the sense of smell, there are still some good snouts to be seen in those lower primates that retain a naked moist rhinarium attached to the upper lip.
Lemurs, lorises, tarsiers, and New World monkeys depend for many aspects of their social and reproductive behaviour on olfactory signals, by means of special scent glands distributed in different regions of the body but congregated principally in the anal and perineal regions (in lemurs and lorises) or in the sternal region (in New World monkeys and tarsiers). Marking behaviour, the placing of scent at various points in the environment, is a prominent feature of the repertoire of communication in these primates. Marking behaviour ceases to be of much importance in the Old World monkeys and apes, with some exceptions such as mandrills, siamangs, concolor gibbons, and even orangutans among the hominoids. All of these primates possess sternal glands, but in all of them the structures by which olfactory signals are given and received are diminished. But all higher primates, including humans, sniff at unfamiliar items of food before placing them in the mouth.
The shape of the nose of higher primates is one of the most reliable means of distinguishing Old World monkeys from New World monkeys at a glance. In New World monkeys (the Platyrrhini, meaning “flat nosed”), the nose is broad, and the nostrils are set wide apart, well separated by a broad septum, and point sideways. In the apes and Old World monkeys (the Catarrhini, meaning “downward nosed”), the nostrils are set close together, point forward or downward, and are separated by a very narrow septum.
Some Old World monkeys—particularly those that have adopted a ground-living way of life, such as baboons and mandrills, of the subfamily Cercopithecinae—appear to have readopted a long snout during their evolution. This structure, however, is not primarily olfactory in function but seems, rather, to be allometric, more closely related to the large size of the jaws and the prominence of the canine teeth; it should be considered a dental muzzle rather than an olfactory one.