Primate SocietiesBarbara B. Smuts, Dorothy L. Cheney, Robert M. Seyfarth, Richard W. Wrangham Primate Societies is a synthesis of the most current information on primate socioecology and its theoretical and empirical significance, spanning the disciplines of behavioral biology, ecology, anthropology, and psychology. It is a very rich source of ideas about other taxa. "A superb synthesis of knowledge about the social lives of non-human primates."—Alan Dixson, Nature |
Contents
1 | |
9 | |
Part II Socioecology | 179 |
Part III Group Life | 297 |
Part IV Communication and Intelligence | 431 |
Part V The Future | 475 |
The Order Primates Species Names and a Guide to Social Organization | 499 |
List of Contributors | 507 |
511 | |
Index | 565 |
Other editions - View all
Primate Societies Barbara B. Smuts,Dorothy L. Cheney,Robert M. Seyfarth,Richard W. Wrangham No preview available - 1987 |
Common terms and phrases
adult females adult males aggression Alouatta Altmann animals apes areas associations Ateles Behav birth brain breeding Callicebus captive Cebus Cercopithecus chap Cheney chimpanzees Chivers competition copulations density diet dispersal dominance rank dominance relationships Dunbar ecology emigrate estrus example feeding Folia Primatol foraging forest fruit Gautier-Hion gelada gibbons Gombe gorillas gray langurs grooming habitat hamadryas baboons home range Hrdy human immature individuals infanticide infants interactions intergroup Japanese macaques juvenile Lemur Macaca male-male mammals mantled howlers mating monogamous mothers multimale groups natal group Nishida nonhuman primates observed occur offspring olive baboons one-male orangutans Papio patas patterns population predation Presbytis primate species primates primatology prosimians rates red colobus relatively rhesus macaques rhesus monkeys Saguinus Saimiri savanna savanna baboons season sexual Seyfarth Smuts social behavior Struhsaker studies subadult talapoin tamarins Terborgh territorial tion troop unpub variation vervet monkeys vocalizations wild World monkeys Wrangham yellow baboons