Sex and Friendship in Baboons

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A01=Barbara B. Smuts
Anestrous Females
Author_Barbara B. Smuts
behavioral ecology
Category=PSVM3
Category=PSVP
Consort Activity
Consort Pair
Consort Partners
Consorting Male
Cross-sex Friendship
cycling
Cycling Females
Dominance Ranks
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
Estrous Cycles
Estrous Females
ethological methods
evolutionary psychology
female
females
focal
Focal Samples
Friend Dyads
interspecies comparison
Japanese Macaques
long
Long Term Resident Males
Male Male Competition
males
Masai Mara Game Reserve
Multi-male Groups
olive
Olive Baboons
Peak Estrus
primate friendship evolution
primate social dynamics
Probable Fathers
Residence Classes
resident
savannah
Savannah Baboons
social bonds research
Subadult Male
term
Yellow Baboons
ZI

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202309736
  • Weight: 498g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Mar 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Those who have been privileged to watch baboons long enough to know them as individuals and who have learned to interpret some of their more subtle interactions will attest that the rapid flow of baboon behavior can at times be overwhelming. In fact, some of the most sophisticated and influential observation methods for sampling vertebrate social behavior grew out of baboon studies, invented by scientists who were trying to cope with the intricacies of baboon behavior. Barbara Smuts' eloquent study of baboons reveals a new depth to their behavior and extends the theories needed to account for it.

While adhering to the most scrupulous methodological strictures, the author maintains an open research strategy--respecting her subjects by approaching them with the open mind of an ethnographer and immersing herself in the complexities of baboon social life before formulating her research design, allowing her to detect and document a new level of subtlety in their behavior. At the Gilgil site, described in this book, she could stroll and sit within a few feet of her subjects. By maintaining such proximity she was able to watch and listen to intimate exchanges within the troop; she was able, in other words, to shift the baboons well along the continuum from "subject" to "informant." By doing so she has illuminated new networks of special relationships in baboons. This empirical contribution accompanies theoretical insights that not only help to explain many of the inconsistencies of previous studies but also provide the foundation for a whole new dimension in the study of primate behavior: analysis oft he dynamics of long-term, intimate relationships and their evolutionary significance.

At every stage of research human observers have underestimated the baboon. These intelligent, curious, emotional, and long-lived creatures are capable of employing stratagems and forming relationships that are not easily detected by traditional research methods. In the process of unraveling their complex social relationships, Smuts has revealed that these masters of strategy and aggressive competition are equally capable of patience, tenderness, and concern.

Barbara B. Smuts is professor of psychology and anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is also the author of Primate Societies .

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