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Chimpanzees in Context: A Comparative Perspective on Chimpanzee Behavior, Cognition, Conservation, and Welfare [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 752 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x43 mm, weight: 966 g, 71 halftones, 44 tables
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jan-2021
  • Izdevniecība: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022672798X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226727981
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  • Cena: 87,23 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 752 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x43 mm, weight: 966 g, 71 halftones, 44 tables
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jan-2021
  • Izdevniecība: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022672798X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226727981
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The study of the chimpanzee, one of the human species&; closest relatives, has led scientists to exciting discoveries about evolution, behavior, and cognition over the past half century. In this book, rising and veteran scholars take a fascinating comparative approach to the culture, behavior, and cognition of both wild and captive chimpanzees. By seeking new perspectives in how the chimpanzee compares to other species, the scientists featured offer a richer understanding of the ways in which chimpanzees&; unique experiences shape their behavior. They also demonstrate how different methodologies provide different insights, how various cultural experiences influence our perspectives of chimpanzees, and how different ecologies in which chimpanzees live affect how they express themselves.
 
After a foreword by Jane Goodall, the book features sections that examine chimpanzee life histories and developmental milestones, behavior, methods of study, animal communication, cooperation, communication, and tool use. The book ends with chapters that consider how we can apply contemporary knowledge of chimpanzees to enhance their care and conservation. Collectively, these chapters remind us of the importance of considering the social, ecological, and cognitive context of chimpanzee behavior, and how these contexts shape our comprehension of chimpanzees. Only by leveraging these powerful perspectives do we stand a chance at improving how we understand, care for, and protect this species.

Recenzijas

Our increased understanding of primate behavior has helped us to better understand ourselves. We are not (as was commonly believed in the early 1960s) the only species able to use and make tools, have personalities, minds, and emotions. There is, after all, no difference in kind between us and other animals. Knowing that our closest living relatives are the great apes and studying ways in which our behavior is so similar to theirs, also helps us appreciate the main differencethe explosive development of the human intellect. How strange that the most intellectual species is destroying our only home, Planet Earth. . . . It takes considerable time to study the many facets of a chimpanzees life. But we dont have much time left if we are to do something to help the survival of our closest living relatives. Now it is time to use our intellect to start healing the harm we have inflicted, to protect the habitats of our primate relatives (along with biodiversity) before it is quite too late. -- Jane Goodall, from the foreword Anyone who wishes to be up to date on chimpanzees and bonobos needs to read this volume. A wealth of knowledge has been gathered by a new generation of enthusiastic researchers both in captivity and in the field. Topics range from social behavior and cognition to conservation and optimal care. It is rare to find so much hard-won information together in one place. -- Frans de Waal, author of "Mamas Last Hug: Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us about Ourselves" Mind-bending discoveries with far-reaching implications are abundant inside this volume. A whole community of the best and brightest scientists reveal startling new secrets about the lives of our closest animal relatives. Following in the pioneering footsteps of Jane Goodall, what they share will surprise and delight every animal lover and academic alike. If you ever wondered how much chimpanzees are like us compared to other animals, this is the book for you. -- Brian Hare, coauthor of "Survival of the Friendliest: Understanding Our Origins and Rediscovering Our Common Humanity" "Chimpanzees in Context is a comprehensive summary of what we know about these remarkable animals and provides information that is essential in developing conservation protocols. . . . [ A] forward-looking collection." -- Marc Bekoff * Psychology Today *

Foreword ix
J. Goodall
Preface: Understanding Chimpanzees in Context xiii
L. M. Hopper
S. R. Ross
Acknowledgments xvii
PART 1 Life Histories and Developmental Milestones
1 Ecological Risk and the Evolution of Great Ape Life Histories
3(33)
C. D. Knott
F. S. Harwell
2 Growing Up: Comparing Ontogeny of Bonobos and Chimpanzees
36(25)
V. Behringer
J. M. G. Stevens
T. Deschner
G. Hohmann
3 Dolphins and Chimpanzees: A Case for Convergence?
61(34)
J. Mann
M. A. Stanton
C. M. Murray
PART 2 A Social Species
4 Social Behavior and Social Tolerance in Chimpanzees and Bonobos
95(20)
J. P. Taglialatela
S. A. Skiba
R. E. Evans
S. L. Bogart
N. G. Schwob
5 Endurance and Flexibility of Close Social Relationships: Comparing Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and Sooty Mangabeys (Cercocebus atys atys)
115(22)
R. M. Wittig
A. Mielke
J. Lester
C. Crockford
6 Urinary Androgens, Dominance Hierarchies, and Social Group Structure among Wild Male Mountain Gorillas
137(30)
S. Rosenbaum
R. Santymire
T. S. Stoinski
PART 3 Studying Chimpanzees
7 Methods to Study Chimpanzee Social Learning from a Comparative Perspective
167(22)
L. M. Hopper
A. J. Carter
8 Automated Methods and the Technological Context of Chimpanzee Research
189(19)
C. F. Martin
I. Adachi
9 The Establishment of Sanctuaries for Former Laboratory Chimpanzees: Challenges, Successes, and Cross-Cultural Context
208(25)
S. Hirata
N. Morimura
K. Watanuki
S. R. Ross
PART 4 Communication
10 Gestural Communication in the Great Apes: Tracing the Origins of Language
233(27)
C. Hobaiter
11 Flexibility in Great Ape Vocal Production
260(21)
S. W. Townsend
S. K. Watson
K. E. Slocombe
12 Vocal Communication in Chimpanzees and Bonobos: A Window into the Social World
281(24)
Z. Clay
PART 5 Cooperation
13 Cooperation and Communication in Great Apes
305(25)
S. Duguid
M. Allritz
A. De Las Heras
S. Nolte
J. Call
14 The Evolution of Cooperation in Dyads and in Groups: Comparing Chimpanzees and Bonobos in the Wild and in the Laboratory
330(16)
S. Yamamoto
15 Putting Chimpanzee Cooperation in Context
346(22)
G. L. Vale
S. F. Brosnan
16 A Comparison of Cooperative Cognition in Corvids, Chimpanzees, and Other Animals
368(23)
J. J. M. Massen
W. A. A. Schaake
T. Bugnyar
PART 6 Tool Use, Cognition, and Culture
17 Extractive Foraging in an Extreme Environment: Tool and Proto-tool Use by Chimpanzees at Fongoli, Senegal
391(19)
J. D. Pruetz
S. L. Bogart
S. Lindshield
18 Cultural Transmission in Dispersing Primates
410(18)
L. V. Luncz
E. Van De Waal
19 On the Origin of Cumulative Culture: Consideration of the Role of Copying in Culture-Dependent Traits and a Reappraisal of the Zone of Latent Solutions Hypothesis
428(26)
C. Tennie
L. M. Hopper
C. P. Van Schaik
20 Cognitive Control and Metacognition in Chimpanzees
454(27)
M. J. Beran
B. M. Perdue
A. E. Parrish
PART 7 Caring for Chimpanzees
21 Chimpanzees in US Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Atypical Behaviors
481(28)
M. A. Bloomsmith
A. W. Clay
S. R. Ross
S. P. Lambeth
C. K. Lutz
S. D. Breaux
R. Pietsch
A. Fultz
M. L. Lammey
S. L. Jacobson
J. E. Perlman
22 When Is "Natural" Better? The Welfare Implications of Limiting Reproduction in Captive Chimpanzees
509(15)
K. A. Cronin
S. R. Ross
23 How Chimpanzee Personality and Video Studies Can Inform Management and Care of the Species: A Case Study
524(28)
E. S. Herrelko
S. J. Vick
H. M. Buchanan-Smith
24 Chimpanzee Welfare in the Context of Science, Policy, and Practice
552(33)
S. R. Ross
PART 8 Conserving Chimpanzees
25 Chimpanzee Conservation: What We Know, What We Do Not Know, and Ways Forward
585(27)
C. A. Chapman
K. Valenta
S. Bortolamiol
S. K. Mugume
M. Yao
26 Holistic Approach for Conservation of Chimpanzees in Kibale National Park, Uganda
612(32)
J. A. Hartel
E. Otali
Z. Machanda
R. W. Wrangham
E. Ross
27 Forest Certification and the High Conservation Value Concept: Protecting Great Apes in the Sangha Trinational Landscape in an Era of Industrial Logging
644(27)
D. B. Morgan
W. Winston
C. E. Ayina
W. Mayoukou
E. V. Lonsdorj
C. M. Sanz
List of Contributors 671(10)
Index 681
Lydia M. Hopper is a primatologist who studies how monkeys and apes innovate and learn new skills. She is the assistant director of the Lester E. Fisher Center for the Study and Conservation of Apes at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, IL, where Stephen R. Ross is the director. Rosss research focuses primarily on chimpanzee behavior, cognition, and welfare. He is coeditor of The Mind of the Chimpanzee: Ecological and Experimental Perspectives, also published by the University of Chicago Press.