Primate Societies

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A01=Hans Kummer
Above Ground
adaptation
Adaptive Modification
anubis
Anubis Baboons
Author_Hans Kummer
baboon
baboons
behavioral ecology
Category=PSVM3
Category=PSVP
Debre Libanos
dominance hierarchies
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
evolutionary biology
Follow
Gallery Forest
Gelada Baboon
Gelada Male
Genus Macaca
group
Group Size
hamadryas
Hamadryas Baboon
Hamadryas Baboons
Hamadryas Females
Hamadryas Males
Inhibit Ion
kinship systems
males
Mountain Gorillas
Multi-male Groups
one-male
patas
Patas Male
Patas Monkey
phylogenetic
Phylogenetic Adaptations
primate ethology
primate group adaptation mechanisms
Primate Social Life
Primate Species
social behavior analysis
Species Border
Swimming Movements
Yellow Baboons

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202309040
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In this book, Hans Kummer, one of the world's leading primate ethologists, examines the patterns of social interaction among primates. He examines this social behavior from the fundamentally biological viewpoint of evolutionary adaptation as part of the survival mechanisms for the species. Recognizing that all activity is constituted in part of genetic programming and in part of adaptive behavior, he explores the borderline area between the genetic and the "cultural." By use of astute observation and clever experimentation he shows that many aspects of social behavior are inherited, and differentially inherited among various primate groups. These data also show, however, that the individuals and troops learn much in primate social life and that these forms are responsive to particular ecological situations. Drawing heavily on knowledge gleaned from his own well-known studies of the Hamadryas baboon, Dr. Kummer introduces the reader to the daily life of a particular primate society. From this sample case, he proceeds to a more general characterization of primate societies, using as examples the great apes and monkeys of Africa, Asia, and South America and particularly the widely studied terrestrial monkey species. The particularities of primate communication, social structure, and economy are described and special attention is devoted to the primate counterparts of kinship and age groups-behavioral differences based on age and sex, and mating and grouping systems. This is followed by a chapter dealing with the ecological functions of the major parameters of primate social life, such as group size and the coordination of activities within it-dominance, leadership systems, and spatial arrangements. The second part of the book is concerned with the origins of behavioral traits of primates, discussed from phylogenetic, ecological, and cultural points of view, again using data-based examples. Dr. Kummer explains why some traits have not evolved that would have been adaptive, and traces the rise of several secondary functions in their place. The final section of- the book confronts man with his fellow primates, emphasizing the probable limits imposed upon human culture by the existing phylogenetic heritage.

Hans Kummer earned his Ph.D. in zoology from the University of Zurich.

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