Primate PatternsPhyllis Dolhinow |
From inside the book
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Page 76
... postures ( such as kissing , grooming , touching , and embracing ) are displayed by all TABLE 2-8 Frequency of different greeting gestures and postures in the age / sex classes , ex- pressed as a percentage of total number of gestures ...
... postures ( such as kissing , grooming , touching , and embracing ) are displayed by all TABLE 2-8 Frequency of different greeting gestures and postures in the age / sex classes , ex- pressed as a percentage of total number of gestures ...
Page 243
... postures , gestures , and sounds , and it is rare that any single item carries the entire message . A great deal of informa- tion is conveyed among animals by the way an animal sits or how it moves . Monkeys and apes communicate with ...
... postures , gestures , and sounds , and it is rare that any single item carries the entire message . A great deal of informa- tion is conveyed among animals by the way an animal sits or how it moves . Monkeys and apes communicate with ...
Page 307
... postures vary considerably among species . The one thing they all have in common is that they are relaxed . Although ... posture is relaxed and locomotion is often erratic and inefficient , and the animal makes many body and limb ...
... postures vary considerably among species . The one thing they all have in common is that they are relaxed . Although ... posture is relaxed and locomotion is often erratic and inefficient , and the animal makes many body and limb ...
Contents
Preface | 8 |
Introduction | 16 |
The Behavior of the Mountain Gorilla | 85 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activity adaptation adult females adult males aggressive behavior approach attack baboons bark brain Cercopithecus changes chimpanzee communication complex context copulation crab-eating macaques DeVore display dominance hierarchy dominant male estrous female evolution example feeding feet field studies forest forms frequently gestures gorilla grooming grunting habitat hamadryas hamadryas baboons Harlow hierarchy home range Hugo van Lawick human important India Indian langurs individual infant interactions Japanese macaques juvenile Kaukori troop Kenya Kovu lips living Macaca macaques mammals mating monkey or ape monkeys and apes mother move movements National Geographic Society nest nonhuman primates normal observed occur Old World monkeys Orcha patas patas monkeys patterns play possible predators present primate behavior prosimians rank relationships rhesus macaques rhesus monkeys role sexual signal silver-backed male similar situations social behavior social group species structure subadult male subordinate threat threatened tion trees usually variability vocalizations Washburn young