While much research has focused on resolving the evolutionary relationships within Sivaladapidae, the phylogenetic affinities within the broader adapiform radiation are still unclear.
Given its dental morphology (i.e., the upper and lower molar cusps and crests that facilitate a combination of puncturing and shearing during occlusion), it has been inferred that Sivaladapis was well-adapted to a highly folivorous diet of fibrous leaves. Moreover, the absence of the hypocone suggests that grinding was not a functional priority for Sivaladapis. Additionally, Sivaladapis fossils have been recovered in association with a gibbon-sized hominoid, suggesting the taxa inhabited a forest community. This faunal association, along with the large body size estimates and dental morphology, suggests that Sivaladapis was an arboreal folivore. Specifically, citing Kay's threshold, in which the upper limit for an insectivorous primate is around 500 grams, the body mass estimates for Sivaladapis falling between 2.6 and 3.4 kg is used as evidence to support the hypothesis that Sivaladapis was a folivore. However, this hypothesis remains to be tested more vigorously with additional fossil material.
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Thomas, H., & Verma, S.N. (1979). Découverte d'un Primate Adapiforme (Sivaladapinae sub. fam. nov.) dans le Miocѐne moyen des Siwaliks de la région de Ramnagar (Jammu et Cachemire, Inde). C. R. Acad. Sci., 289, 833-836.
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Gingerich, P.D., & Sahni, A., (1984). Dentition of Sivaladapis nagrii (Adapidae) from the late Miocene of India. Int. J. Primato., 5, 63-79.