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E-grāmata: High Altitude Primates

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The basic goal of the volume is to compile the most up to date research on how high altitude affects the behavior, ecology, evolution and conservation status of primates, especially in comparison to lowland populations. Historically, the majority of primate studies have focused on lowland populations. However, as the lowlands have been disappearing, more and more primatologists have begun studying populations located in higher altitudes. High altitude populations are important not only because of their uniqueness, but also because they highlight the range of primate adaptability and the complex variables that are involved in primate evolution. These populations are good examples of how geographic scales result in diversification and/or speciation. Yet, there have been very few papers addressing how this high altitude environment affects the behavior, ecology, and conservation status of these primates. ?

This volume examines how high altitude affects the behavior, ecology, evolution and conservation status of primates, especially in comparison to lowland populations. It gives examples of how geographic scales result in diversification and/or speciation.
Part I High Altitude Prosimian Primates
Effects of Altitude on the Conservation Biogeography of Lemurs in South East Madagascar
3(20)
Shawn M. Lehman
Hibernation Patterns of Dwarf Lemurs in the High Altitude Forest of Eastern Madagascar
23(20)
Marina B. Blanco
Laurie R. Godfrey
Altitudinal Distribution and Ranging Patterns of Pygmy Tarsiers (Tarsius pumilus)
43(20)
Nanda B. Grow
Part II High Altitude Monkeys
Biogeography and Conservation of Andean Primates in Peru
63(22)
Sam Shanee
Noga Shanee
Nicola Campbell
Nestor Allgas
Population Density and Ecological Traits of Highland Woolly Monkeys at Cueva de los Guacharos National Park, Colombia
85(18)
Sergio A. Vargas
Julian Leon
Monica Ramirez
Nelson Galvis
Edgar Cifuentes
Pablo R. Stevenson
Seed Dispersal by Woolly Monkeys in Cueva de los Guacharos National Park (Colombia): An Amazonian Primate Dispersing Montane Plants
103(12)
Monica A. Ramirez
Nelson F. Galvis
Sergio A. Vargas
Jose Julian Leon
Edgar F. Cifuentes
Pablo R. Stevenson
Distribution and Ecology of the Most Tropical of the High-Elevation Montane Colobines: The Ebony Langur on Java
115(18)
Vincent Nijman
Snow Tolerance of Japanese Macaques Inhabiting High-Latitude Mountainous Forests of Japan
133(20)
Hiroto Enari
Seasonal and Altitudinal Migration of Japanese Macaques in the Northern Japan Alps
153(30)
Shigeyuki Izumiyama
Rhinopithecus bieti at Xiaochangdu, Tibet: Adaptations to a Marginal Environment
183(16)
Zuofu Xiang
Nutritional Implications of the High-Elevation Lifestyle of Rhinopithecus bieti
199(12)
Heidi Bissell
Variation in Primate Abundance Along an Elevational Gradient in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania
211(16)
Claudia Barelli
Juan F. Gallardo Palacios
Francesco Rovero
Deriving Conservation Status for a High Altitude Population: Golden Monkeys of Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda
227(20)
Dennis Twinomugisha
Michael D. Wasserman
Colin A. Chapman
Part III High Altitude Apes
High Altitude Diets: Implications for the Feeding and Nutritional Ecology of Mountain Gorillas
247(18)
Jessica M. Rothman
John Bosco Nkurunungi
Bianca F. Shannon
Margaret A. H. Bryer
Preliminary Data on the Highland Sumatran Orangutans (Pongo abelii) of Batang Toru
265(23)
S. A. Wich
G. Usher
H. H. Peters
Mokhamad Faesal
Rakhman Khakim
M. G. Nowak
G. M. Fredriksson
Modern Human Biological Adaptations to High-Altitude Environments in the Andean Archaeological Record
288(37)
Karen J. Weinstein
High Altitude Primates, Extreme Primates, and Anthropological Primatology: Or, There is More to Human Evolution than Tool Use, Culture, or African Apes
325(26)
Ken Sayers
Index 351