Niu, Kefeng Ang, Andie Xiao, Zhi Gamba, Marco
Published in
International Journal of Primatology
Clarifying the scientific identity of ancient biological names in historical archives is essential to understand traditional knowledge and literary metaphors of animals in human culture. Adopting a cross-disciplinary (Primatology, Linguistics, Historiography, Historical Sociology) analysis, we developed a theoretical framework for studies of the sc...
Lhota, Stanislav Yap, Jo Leen Benedict, Mark Louis Ching, Ken Shaw, Bob Angkee, Ben Duncan Lee, Nicole Lee, Vendon Mao, Jean-Jay Ruppert, Nadine
...
Published in
International Journal of Primatology
Interspecific hybridization in primates is common but hybridization between distantly related sympatric primate species is rarely observed in the wild. We present evidence for a possible hybridization event between Nasalis larvatus and Trachypithecus cristatus in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Sabah, through assessment of photograph...
Estrada, Alejandro Garber, Paul A.
Published in
International Journal of Primatology
Nonhuman primates are facing an impending extinction crisis with over 65% of species listed as Vulnerable, Endangered, or Critically Endangered, and 93% characterized by declining populations. Primary drivers of primate population decline include deforestation, principally for industrial agriculture and the production of food and nonfood commoditie...
Cardinal, Claire Strubel, Miranda A. Oxley, Aimee S.
Published in
International Journal of Primatology
Primatological research is often associated with understanding animals and their habitats, yet practical conservation depends entirely on human actions. This encompasses the activities of Indigenous and local people, conservationists, and NGOs working on the ground, as well as more remote funders and policymakers. In this paper we explore what it m...
Hernández Tienda, Clara Majolo, Bonaventura Romero, Teresa Illa Maulany, Risma Oka Ngakan, Putu Beltrán Francés, Víctor Gregorio Hernández, Elisa Gómez-Melara, Jose Llorente, Miquel Amici, Federica
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Published in
International Journal of Primatology
When studying animal behavior in the wild, some behaviors may require observation from a relatively short distance. In these cases, habituation is commonly used to ensure that animals do not perceive researchers as a direct threat and do not alter their behavior in their presence. However, habituation can have significant effects on the welfare and...
Fernández, David Kerhoas, Daphne Dempsey, Andrea Billany, Josephine McCabe, Gráinne Argirova, Elitsa
Published in
International journal of primatology
Over the past decades, primate populations have been declining. Four years ago, >60% of species were listed as threatened. As the rate of loss accelerates and new IUCN assessments are being published, we used IUCN Red List assessments and peer-reviewed literature published within the last 5 yr to evaluate the status of primates globally, by region ...
Garber, Paul A
Published in
International journal of primatology
Primates are facing a global extinction crisis driven by an expanding human population, environmental degradation, the conversion of tropical forests into monocultures for industrial agriculture and cattle ranching, unsustainable resource extraction, hunting, climate change, and the threat of emerging zoonotic diseases. And, although many primate s...
Cavalcante, Thiago Strier, Karen B. Bicca-Marques, Júlio César
Published in
International Journal of Primatology
The main factors influencing feeding competition among members of diurnal primate groups are the distribution, availability, and quality of food resources. Socioecological models predict that temporal availability of preferred resources, such as fruit, can influence intragroup feeding competition, which is expected to affect rates of agonism and in...
Sengupta, Asmita Radhakrishna, Sindhu
Published in
International Journal of Primatology
Incidental primate tourism is prevalent in many primate habitat countries. In these scenarios, although the primary motivation of the tourists may not be to interact with primates, they may do so because of the presence of primates in tourist spots. Provisioning of primates is a common behavior that humans engage in at these sites. While several st...
Huskisson, Sarah M. Jacobson, Sarah L. Egelkamp, Crystal L. Ross, Stephen R. Hopper, Lydia M.
Published in
International Journal of Primatology
Understanding captive animals’ preferences is important for their care and management. However, pairwise testing for preference can be time consuming, open to bias, and typically restricted to stimuli that can be presented manually. We tested the efficacy of using touchscreens to test zoo-housed primates’ food preferences and evaluated the primates...