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Primate Communities

Primate Communities

Primate Communities

J. G. Fleagle, State University of New York, Stony Brook
Charles Janson, State University of New York, Stony Brook
Kaye Reed, Arizona State University
November 1999
Available
Hardback
9780521620444

    Although the behavior and ecology of primates has been more thoroughly studied than that of any other group of mammals, there have been very few attempts to compare the communities of living primates found in different parts of the world. In Primate Communities, an international group of experts compares the composition, behavior, and ecology of primate communities in Africa, Asia, Madagascar, and South America. They examine the factors underlying the similarities and differences among these communities, including their phylogenetic history, climate, rainfall, soil type, forest composition, competition with other vertebrates, and human activities. As it brings together information about primate communities from around the world for the very first time, it will quickly become an important source book for researchers in anthropology, ecology, and conservation, and a readable and informative text for undergraduate and graduate students studying primate ecology, primate conservation, or primate behavior.

    • First book to compare and contrast primate communities worldwide, rather than look at individual communities
    • International panel of experts with experience in the field in Africa, Asia, South America and Madagascar
    • Covers all primate species in all habitats

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Ultimately, this book promises to be widely used...a valuable resource to a diverse audience." Bulletin of the Canadian Society of Zoologists

    "This timely and exciting volume provides an enormous amount of information on primates and the habitats in which they are found around the world...The collection is ideal for advanced undergraduate courses and graduate courses in primate conservation, ecology and/or behavior. I have no doubt that it will shape the scope and scale(s) at which students and scholars of primate biology will be addressing their research questions for years to come." Animal Behaviour

    "In addition to being required reading for most promatologists, many chapters in this volume will also be of interest to students of ecology in general...this book provides an excellent synthesis of data on nonhuman primates throughout the world; yet, at the same time, it should stimulate us to standardize data collection in out attempt to understand primates at the community level..." Journal of Anthropological Research

    "[A] book which is unique in primatology in that it presents information on the few long term field projects that have focused on the dynamics of primate communities, rather than on a single species. It is written by leading primatologists that all have years of field research to their credit." Ecoscience

    "The book contains useful chapters for introductory courses in wildlife management, conservation biology, primatology, although most chapters will probably be better targeted advanced under-graduate or graduate students...The exercise of comparison made by the author of this book extremely useful in pinpointing the areas where data need to be collected." EcoScience

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 1999
    Hardback
    9780521620444
    339 pages
    254 × 195 × 23 mm
    0.915kg
    105 b/w illus. 48 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. African primate communities: determinants of structure and threats to survival Colin A. Chapman, Annie Gautier-Hion, John F. Oates and Daphne Onderdonk
    • 2. Biomass and use of resources in South and South-East Asian primate communities A. K. Gupta and David J. Chivers
    • 3. Species coexistence, distribution and environmental determinants of neotropical primate richness: a community-level zoogeographic analysis Carlos A. Peres and Charles H. Janson
    • 4. Primate communities: Madagascar Jorg U. Ganzhorn, Patricia C. Wright and Jonah Ratsimbazafy
    • 5. Primate diversity John G. Fleagle, Charles H. Janson and Kaye E. Reed
    • 6. Phylogenetic and temporal perspectives on primate ecology John G. Fleagle and Kaye E. Reed
    • 7. Population density of primates in communities: differences in community structure Kaye E. Reed
    • 8. Body mass, competition and the structure of primate communities Jorg U. Ganzhorn
    • 9. Convergence and divergence in primate social systems Peter M. Kappeler
    • 10. Of mice and monkeys: primates as predictors of mammal community richness Louise H. Emmons
    • 11. Comparing communities John G. Fleagle, Charles H. Janson and Kaye E. Reed
    • 12. Large-scale patterns of species richness and species range size in anthropoid primates Harriet A. C. Eeley and Michael J. Lawes
    • 13. The recent evolutionary past of primate communities: likely environmental impacts during the past three millennia Caroline Tutin and Lee White
    • 14. Resources and primate community structure Charles H. Janson and Colin Chapman
    • 15. Effects of subsistence hunting and forest types on the structure of Amazonian primate communities Carlos A. Peres
    • 16. Spatial and temporal scales in primate community structure John G. Fleagle, Charles H. Janson and Kaye E. Reed
    • 17. Promate communities in Africa: the consequences of long-term evolution or the artifact of recent hunting Thomas T. Struhsaker
    • 18. The future of primate communities: a reflection of the present Patricia C. Wright and Jukka Jernvall
    • 19. Summary and prospects John G. Fleagle, Charles H. Janson and Kaye E. Reed.
      Contributors
    • Colin A. Chapman, Ann Gautier-Hion, John F. Oates, Daphne Onderdonk, A. K. Gupta, David J. Chivers, Carlos A. Peres, Charles Janson, Jorg U. Ganzhorn, Patricia C. Wright, Jonah Ratsimbazafy, John G. Fleagle, Kaye E. Reed, Peter M. Kappeler, Louise H. Emmons, Harriet A. C. Eeley, Michael J. Lawes, Caroline Tutin, Lee White, Thomas T. Struhsaker, Jukka Jernvall

    • Editors
    • J. G. Fleagle , State University of New York, Stony Brook
    • Charles Janson , State University of New York, Stony Brook
    • Kaye Reed , Arizona State University