Patterns of Primate Behavior |
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Page 115
... moved in a day varies , but is often very short . Carpenter places the usual howler pace at 90 meters per hour . On the ... move- ment , but their position in the progression varies . Even in a sustained march , movement is not continual ...
... moved in a day varies , but is often very short . Carpenter places the usual howler pace at 90 meters per hour . On the ... move- ment , but their position in the progression varies . Even in a sustained march , movement is not continual ...
Page 233
... move , and the extreme mobility of individual ani- mals all handicap the earthbound fieldworker's observations of group organization and movement . In general terms , we believe that spider groups repeatedly follow similar but not ...
... move , and the extreme mobility of individual ani- mals all handicap the earthbound fieldworker's observations of group organization and movement . In general terms , we believe that spider groups repeatedly follow similar but not ...
Page 239
... move most rapidly , and therefore these animals are underrepresented . Spiders on the move tend to be lost quickly . Moreover , locomotion is assessed in terms of the distance the animal moves , which is not necessarily the same as the ...
... move most rapidly , and therefore these animals are underrepresented . Spiders on the move tend to be lost quickly . Moreover , locomotion is assessed in terms of the distance the animal moves , which is not necessarily the same as the ...
Contents
TWO | 27 |
Communication | 41 |
Sensory limitations on the perception of communication | 58 |
Copyright | |
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activity adult females adult males Africa aggression animal's animals anthropoids apes appear arboreal Barro Colorado Island cage central chacma baboons characteristics chimpanzees color common baboon communication copulation cycle disease displays dominance status ecology estrous feeding field study foraging forest free-ranging frequently fruit geladas gibbons glands Gombe gorilla grooming Group composition habitat hamadryas hamadryas baboons Harlow hectares hierarchy home range hormones howler monkeys howling human infant infection interactions Japanese macaques juveniles laboratory langurs leader male lemurs lifeways meters mother move movements nonhuman primates observer occur offspring Old World olfactory one-male ordinary males Papio particularly patas monkey pattern percent plants play population predation primate behavior primates primatologists prosimians records relationships reproductive response rhesus monkeys role savanna sexual dimorphism signals sleeping social behavior social organization species spider monkeys Struhsaker study area subgroups subleaders Tikal tion trees troop variability vervet monkeys vocalizations Washoe