All Stories

  1. A Tiered Analysis of Community Benefits and Conservation Engagement from the Makerere University Biological Field Station, Uganda
  2. Metrics for characterizing network structure and node importance in Spatial Social Networks
  3. Social Structure Facilitated the Evolution of Care-giving as a Strategy for Disease Control in the Human Lineage
  4. The evolution of fruit colour: phylogeny, abiotic factors and the role of mutualists
  5. Frugivores and the evolution of fruit colour
  6. Primate Seed Dispersal and Forest Restoration: An African Perspective for a Brighter Future
  7. Annual cycles are the most common reproductive strategy in African tropical tree communities
  8. Solar radiation and ENSO predict fruiting phenology patterns in a 15-year record from Kibale National Park, Uganda
  9. Seasonal variation in diet and nutrition of the northern-most population of Rhinopithecus roxellana
  10. Primate population dynamics: variation in abundance over space and time
  11. Social Behaviours and Networks of Vervet Monkeys Are Influenced by Gastrointestinal Parasites
  12. Competing pressures on populations: long-term dynamics of food availability, food quality, disease, stress and animal abundance
  13. Long-term declines in nutritional quality of tropical leaves
  14. Vervet (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) Intragroup Spatial Positioning: Dominants Trade-Off Predation Risk for Increased Food Acquisition
  15. Determinants of Reproductive Performance Among Female Gray-Cheeked Mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena) in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  16. Safeguarding biodiversity: what is perceived as working, according to the conservation community?
  17. Geometry of nutrition in field studies: an illustration using wild primates
  18. Now there is no land: a story of ethnic migration in a protected area landscape in western Uganda
  19. Changes in Elephant Abundance Affect Forest Composition or Regeneration?
  20. Hidden Population Structure and Cross-species Transmission of Whipworms (Trichuris sp.) in Humans and Non-human Primates in Uganda
  21. The challenge of interpreting primate diets: mangabey foraging onBlighia unijugatafruit in relation to changing nutrient content
  22. Cascading impacts of anthropogenically driven habitat loss: deforestation, flooding, and possible lead poisoning in howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra)
  23. Providing health care to improve community perceptions of protected areas
  24. Discovery and Characterization of Distinct Simian Pegiviruses in Three Wild African Old World Monkey Species
  25. Applying evolutionary concepts to wildlife disease ecology and management
  26. Increasing Group Size Alters Behavior of a Folivorous Primate
  27. High Genetic Diversity and Adaptive Potential of Two Simian Hemorrhagic Fever Viruses in a Wild Primate Population
  28. Maternal Investment and Infant Survival in Gray-Cheeked Mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena)
  29. Contagious Deposition of Seeds in Spider Monkeys' Sleeping Trees Limits Effective Seed Dispersal in Fragmented Landscapes
  30. Highly nested diets in intrapopulation monkey-resource food webs
  31. Timing is everything: expanding the cost of sexual attraction hypothesis
  32. Transmission Patterns of Pinworms in Two Sympatric Congeneric Primate Species
  33. Female red colobus monkeys maintain their densities through flexible feeding strategies in logged forests in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  34. Nodule Worm Infection in Humans and Wild Primates in Uganda: Cryptic Species in a Newly Identified Region of Human Transmission
  35. Individualistic Environmental Ethics
  36. Discovery and full genome characterization of a new SIV lineage infecting red-tailed guenons (Cercopithecus ascanius schmidti) in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  37. Fecal microbiomes of non-human primates in Western Uganda reveal species-specific communities largely resistant to habitat perturbation
  38. Deriving Conservation Status for a High Altitude Population: Golden Monkeys of Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda
  39. Nutritional correlates of the “lean season”: Effects of seasonality and frugivory on the nutritional ecology of diademed sifakas
  40. Is Markhamia lutea’s abundance determined by animal foraging?
  41. Emergent Group Level Navigation: An Agent-Based Evaluation of Movement Patterns in a Folivorous Primate
  42. Sensory information and associative cues used in food detection by wild vervet monkeys
  43. Physiological and Behavioral Effects of Capture Darting on Red Colobus Monkeys (Procolobus rufomitratus) with a Comparison to Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) Predation
  44. The Roles of Phytoestrogens in Primate Ecology and Evolution
  45. Resource Use in a Landscape Matrix by an Arboreal Primate: Evidence of Supplementation in Black howlers (Alouatta pigra)
  46. Shrub Cover Influence on Seedling Growth and Survival Following Logging of a Tropical Forest
  47. Tropical phenology: bi-annual rhythms and interannual variation in an Afrotropical butterfly assemblage
  48. Commercial harvesting of Ficus timber – An emerging threat to frugivorous wildlife and sustainable forestry
  49. Analysing small-scale aggregation in animal visits in space and time: the ST-BBD method
  50. Microsatellite DNA Suggests that Group Size Affects Sex-Biased Dispersal Patterns in Red Colobus Monkeys
  51. Primates in Fragments
  52. Erratum
  53. Diet and polyspecific associations affect spatial patterns among redtail monkeys (Cercopithecus ascanius)
  54. Fragments and Food: Red-Tailed Monkey Abundance in Privately Owned Forest Fragments of Central Uganda
  55. Assessing Habitat Fragmentation Effects on Primates: The Importance of Evaluating Questions at the Correct Scale
  56. Going, Going, Gone: A 15-Year History of the Decline of Primates in Forest Fragments near Kibale National Park, Uganda
  57. Primates in Fragments 10 Years Later: Once and Future Goals
  58. Discovery and full genome characterization of two highly divergent simian immunodeficiency viruses infecting black-and-white colobus monkeys (Colobus guereza) in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  59. Meet the Parasites: genetic approaches uncover new insights in parasitology
  60. Linking feeding ecology and population abundance: a review of food resource limitation on primates
  61. Are Primates Ecosystem Engineers?
  62. Estrogenic plant consumption predicts red colobus monkey (Procolobus rufomitratus) hormonal state and behavior
  63. Primate DNA suggests long-term stability of an African rainforest
  64. Sleeping Sites and Latrines of Spider Monkeys in Continuous and Fragmented Rainforests: Implications for Seed Dispersal and Forest Regeneration
  65. Variable Microsatellite Loci for Population Genetic Analysis of Old World Monkey Lice (Pedicinus sp.)
  66. A Survey of Gastrointestinal Parasites of Olive Baboons (Papio anubis) in Human Settlement Areas of Mole National Park, Ghana
  67. How do differences in species and part consumption affect diet nutrient concentrations? A test with red colobus monkeys in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  68. Do Nematode Infections of Red Colobus (Procolobus rufomitratus) and Black-and-White Colobus (Colobus guereza) on Humanized Forest Edges Differ from Those on Nonhumanized Forest Edges?
  69. SEASONAL MORTALITY PATTERNS IN NON-HUMAN PRIMATES: IMPLICATIONS FOR VARIATION IN SELECTION PRESSURES ACROSS ENVIRONMENTS
  70. Biomass accumulation in tropical lands with different disturbance histories: Contrasts within one landscape and across regions
  71. Estrogenic plant foods of red colobus monkeys and mountain gorillas in uganda
  72. Patterns and Perceptions of Climate Change in a Biodiversity Conservation Hotspot
  73. Searching in heterogeneous and limiting environments: foraging strategies of white-lipped peccaries (Tayassu pecari)
  74. Howlers Are Able to Survive in Eucalyptus Plantations Where Remnant and Regenerating Vegetation Is Available
  75. Methods in Primate Nutritional Ecology: A User’s Guide
  76. The Primates 2011 Most-Cited Paper Award is conferred upon Dr. Colin A. Chapman
  77. Patch depletion behavior differs between sympatric folivorous primates
  78. Origin and deposition sites influence seed germination and seedling survival of Manilkara zapota: implications for long-distance, animal-mediated seed dispersal
  79. Spatial patterns of illegal resource extraction in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  80. Landscapes as continuous entities: forest disturbance and recovery in the Albertine Rift landscape
  81. Novel, Divergent Simian Hemorrhagic Fever Viruses in a Wild Ugandan Red Colobus Monkey Discovered Using Direct Pyrosequencing
  82. Seasonality in fruit availability affects frugivorous primate biomass and species richness
  83. Post-logging recovery time is longer than expected in an East African tropical forest
  84. Intensive tree planting facilitates tropical forest biodiversity and biomass accumulation in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  85. Censusing large mammals in Kibale National Park: evaluation of the intensity of sampling required to determine change
  86. Healthy baboon with no upper jaw or nose: an extreme case of adaptability in the Kibale National Park, Uganda
  87. An agent-based model of red colobus resources and disease dynamics implicates key resource sites as hot spots of disease transmission
  88. Ecology Primate Parasite Ecology: The Dynamics and Study of HostParasite Relationships . Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Volume 57. Edited by MichaelA.Huffman and ColinA.Chapman. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge Univers...
  89. Tropical tree community shifts: Implications for wildlife conservation
  90. Sources of variation in fecal cortisol levels in howler monkeys in belize
  91. Understanding long-term primate community dynamics: implications of forest change
  92. The structure and status of forest fragments outside protected areas in central Uganda
  93. Enrichment planting does not improve tree restoration when compared with natural regeneration in a former pine plantation in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  94. Hunting and the conservation of a social ungulate: the white-lipped peccary Tayassu pecari in Calakmul, Mexico
  95. Floristic heterogeneity between forested sites in Kibale National Park, Uganda: insights into the fine-scale determinants of density in a large-bodied frugivorous primate
  96. Intratree vertical variation of fruit density and the nature of contest competition in frugivores
  97. Colobus monkey parasite infections in wet and dry habitats: implications for climate change
  98. Rapid Assessment of the Nutritional Value of Foods Eaten by Mountain Gorillas: Applying Near-Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy to Primatology
  99. The influence of habitat on behaviour in a group of St. Kitts green monkeys
  100. The status of anthropogenic threat at the people-park interface of Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda
  101. Within-species differences in primate social structure: evolution of plasticity and phylogenetic constraints
  102. Review of "Primate Parasite Ecology: The dynamics and study of host-parasite relationships" by Michael A. Huffman and Colin A. Chapman (Eds.)
  103. Golden monkey ranging in relation to spatial and temporal variation in food availability
  104. Measuring physical traits of primates remotely: the use of parallel lasers
  105. Bigger groups have fewer parasites and similar cortisol levels: a multi-group analysis in red colobus monkeys
  106. The Primates 2008 Most-Cited Paper Award is conferred upon Dr. Colin Chapman
  107. COPROLOGIC EVIDENCE OF GASTROINTESTINAL HELMINTHS OF FOREST BABOONS, PAPIO ANUBIS, IN KIBALE NATIONAL PARK, UGANDA
  108. Mating Tactics in Male Grey-Cheeked Mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena)
  109. Forest Fragmentation as Cause of Bacterial Transmission among Nonhuman Primates, Humans, and Livestock, Uganda
  110. Fission‐Fusion Dynamics
  111. A 10-year evaluation of the functional basis for regeneration habitat preference of trees in an African evergreen forest
  112. Serologic Evidence for Novel Poxvirus in Endangered Red Colobus Monkeys, Western Uganda
  113. Thomas T. Struhsaker: Recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award of the International Primatological Society 2006
  114. Tree spacing and area of competitive influence do not scale with tree size in an African rain forest
  115. Forest fragmentation, the decline of an endangered primate, and changes in host–parasite interactions relative to an unfragmented forest
  116. Fiber-bound nitrogen in gorilla diets: implications for estimating dietary protein intake of primates
  117. Intratree Variation in Fruit Production and Implications for Primate Foraging
  118. The effect of the spatial scale of recruitment on tree diversity in Afromontane forest fragments
  119. Indications for female mate choice in grey-cheeked mangabeys Lophocebus albigena johnstoni in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  120. Controversy over the application of current socioecological models to folivorous primates:Colobus vellerosus fits the predictions
  121. Primate group size and interpreting socioecological models: Do folivores really play by different rules?
  122. Population Declines of Colobus in Western Uganda and Conservation Value of Forest Fragments
  123. Variation in diet and ranging of black and white colobus monkeys in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  124. Patterns of gastrointestinal bacterial exchange between chimpanzees and humans involved in research and tourism in western Uganda
  125. Temporal dynamics of nutrition, parasitism, and stress in colobus monkeys: Implications for population regulation and conservation
  126. Golden monkey populations decline despite improved protection in Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda
  127. Nutritional Correlates of Population Density Across Habitats and Logging Intensities in Redtail Monkeys (Cercopithecus ascanius)1
  128. Nutritional ecology of elephants in Kibale National Park, Uganda, and its relationship with crop-raiding behaviour
  129. Testing mechanisms of coexistence among two species of frugivorous primates
  130. What hope for African primate diversity?
  131. Prediction of Parasite Infection Dynamics in Primate Metapopulations Based on Attributes of Forest Fragmentation
  132. Densities of Two Frugivorous Primates with Respect to Forest and Fragment Tree Species Composition and Fruit Availability
  133. Life on the edge: gastrointestinal parasites from the forest edge and interior primate groups
  134. Do food availability, parasitism, and stress have synergistic effects on red colobus populations living in forest fragments?
  135. Seasonal variation in the quality of a tropical ripe fruit and the response of three frugivores
  136. Terrestrial Behavior of Ateles spp
  137. Tree leaf chemical characters: selective pressures by folivorous primates and invertebrates
  138. Assessing dietary protein of colobus monkeys through faecal sample analysis: a tool to evaluate habitat quality
  139. Primates and the Ecology of their Infectious Diseases: How will Anthropogenic Change Affect Host-Parasite Interactions?
  140. Towards an ecological solution to the folivore paradox: patch depletion as an indicator of within-group scramble competition in red colobus monkeys (Piliocolobus tephrosceles)
  141. Effects of logging on gastrointestinal parasite infections and infection risk in African primates
  142. Primate seed dispersal: Coevolution and conservation implications
  143. Predation on primates: Where are we and what's next?
  144. Thirty Years of Research in Kibale National Park, Uganda, Reveals a Complex Picture for Conservation
  145. GASTROINTESTINAL PARASITES OF THE COLOBUS MONKEYS OF UGANDA
  146. Diversity of woody species in forest, treefall gaps, and edge in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  147. Parasite prevalence and richness in sympatric colobines: effects of host density
  148. A long-term evaluation of fruiting phenology: importance of climate change
  149. GASTROINTESTINAL PARASITES OF THE GUENONS OF WESTERN UGANDA
  150. Arrested succession in logging gaps: is tree seedling growth and survival limiting?
  151. Unfavorable successional pathways and the conservation value of logged tropical forest
  152. Conservation, Ecology, and Management of African Fresh Waters edited by THOMAS L. CRISMAN, LAUREN J. CHAPMAN, COLIN A. CHAPMAN and LES S. KAUFMAN Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2003. Pp. 514, US$34.95 (pbk.).
  153. Group size in folivorous primates: ecological constraints and the possible influence of social factors
  154. Conservation, Ecology and Management of African FreshwatersBY THOMAS L. CRISMAN, LAUREN J. CHAPMAN, COLIN A. CHAPMAN AND LES S. KAUFMAN xxii + 514 pp., 52 figs, 22.5 × 15 × 2.4 cm, ISBN 0 8130 2600 8 paperback, US$ 34.95, Gainesville, USA: University P...
  155. Predicting folivorous primate abundance: Validation of a nutritional model
  156. Tree Climbing Strategies for Primate Ecological Studies
  157. Respiratory Ecology of Macroinvertebrates in a Swamp–River System of East Africa1
  158. The distribution and feeding ecology of the characidBrycinus sadleriin Lake Nabugabo, Uganda: implications for persistence with Nile perch (Lates niloticus)
  159. Hardness of cercopithecine foods: Implications for the critical function of enamel thickness in exploiting fallback foods
  160. Hood River Production Program Review, Final Report 1991-2001.
  161. BRIDGING THE GAP: INFLUENCE OF SEED DEPOSITION ON SEEDLING RECRUITMENT IN A PRIMATE–TREE INTERACTION
  162. Fragmentation and Alteration of Seed Dispersal Processes: An Initial Evaluation of Dung Beetles, Seed Fate, and Seedling Diversity1
  163. Determinants of colobine monkey abundance: the importance of food energy, protein and fibre content
  164. Tree-Shrub Interactions During Early Secondary Forest Succession in Uganda
  165. Fish Faunal Resurgence in Lake Nabugabo, East Africa
  166. Consequences of plantation harvest during tropical forest restoration in Uganda
  167. Fragmentation and Alteration of Seed Dispersal Processes: An Initial Evaluation of Dung Beetles, Seed Fate, and Seedling Diversity1
  168. Fragmentation: Specter of the Future or the Spirit of Conservation?
  169. Primate Survival in Community-Owned Forest Fragments: Are Metapopulation Models Useful Amidst Intensive use?
  170. Biodiversity and Fishery Sustainability in the Lake Victoria Basin: An Unexpected Marriage?
  171. Foraging challenges of red colobus monkeys: influence of nutrients and secondary compounds
  172. Physiological refugia: swamps, hypoxia tolerance and maintenance of fish diversity in the Lake Victoria region
  173. Does Weeding Promote Regeneration of an Indigenous Tree Community in Felled Pine Plantations in Uganda?
  174. Conductivity as a predictor of a total cations and salinity in Ethiopian lakes and rivers: revisiting earlier models
  175. Scale issues in the study of primate foraging: Red colobus of Kibale National Park
  176. Protecting terrestrial mammal communities: potential role of pine plantations
  177. EXPEDITING REFORESTATION IN TROPICAL GRASSLANDS: DISTANCE AND ISOLATION FROM SEED SOURCES IN PLANTATIONS
  178. Fuelwood Resources and Forest Regeneration on Fallow Land in Uganda
  179. Determinants of group size in the red colobus monkey ( Procolobus badius ): an evaluation of the generality of the ecological-constraints model
  180. Primate conservation in the new millennium: The role of scientists
  181. Ecology of a diplozoon parasite on the gills of the African cyprinid Barbus neumayeri
  182. Habitat alteration and the conservation of African primates: Case study of Kibale National Park, Uganda
  183. Habitat alteration and the conservation of African primates: Case study of Kibale National Park, Uganda
  184. Long-Term Effects of Logging on African Primate Communities: a 28-Year Comparison From Kibale National Park, Uganda
  185. Relationship between chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) density and large, fleshy-fruit tree density: Conservation implications
  186. Forest Restoration in Abandoned Agricultural Land: a Case Study from East Africa
  187. Resources and primate community structure
  188. African primate communities: Determinants of structure and threats to survival
  189. SEED DISPERSAL AND POTENTIAL FOREST SUCCESSION IN ABANDONED AGRICULTURE IN TROPICAL AFRICA
  190. Potential causes of arrested succession in Kibale National Park, Uganda: growth and mortality of seedlings
  191. Implications of small scale variation in ecological conditions for the diet and density of red colobus monkeys
  192. Hypoxia Tolerance of the Mormyrid Petrocephalus catostoma: Implications for Persistence in Swamp Refugia
  193. Temporal patterns of crop-raiding by primates: linking food availability in croplands and adjacent forest
  194. Buttress formation and directional stress experienced during critical phases of tree development
  195. The Pictorial Guide to the Living Primates. Noel Rowe
  196. Dung beetles as secondary seed dispersers: impact on seed predation and germination
  197. Forests without primates: Primate/plant codependency
  198. Forests without primates: Primate/plant codependency
  199. Forest Regeneration in Logged and Unlogged Forests of Kibale National Park, Uganda
  200. Large ranches as conservation tools in the Venezuelan llanos
  201. Large ranches as conservation tools in the Venezuelan llanos
  202. Evolution in fast forward: haplochromine fishes of the Lake Victoria region
  203. A Re-Evaluation of Factors Influencing the Sex Ratio of Spider Monkey Populations with New Data from Maraca Island, Brazil
  204. Mangabey (Cercocebus albigena) ranging patterns in relation to fruit availability and the risk of parasite infection in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  205. Wetland ecotones as refugia for endangered fishes
  206. Colobine Monkeys: Their Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution
  207. Social ecology of Kanyawara chimpanzees: implications for understanding the costs of great ape groups
  208. Frugivory and the fate of dispersed and non-dispersed seeds of six African tree species
  209. Refugia for Endangered Fishes from an Introduced Predator in Lake Nabugabo, Uganda
  210. Mixed-species primate groups in the kibale forest: Ecological constraints on association
  211. Exotic tree plantations and the regeneration of natural forests in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  212. Hypoxia Tolerance in Twelve Species of East African Cichlids: Potential for Low Oxygen Refugia in Lake Victoria
  213. Hypoxia Tolerance in Twelve Species of East African Cichlids: Potential for Low Oxygen Refugia in Lake Victoria
  214. Survival without Dispersers: Seedling Recruitment under Parents
  215. Positional behavior in five sympatric old world monkeys
  216. Patchiness in the abundance of metacercariae parasitizingPoecilia gillii (Poeciliidae) isolated in pools of an intermittent tropical stream
  217. Habitat, annual, and seasonal effects on positional behavior in red colobus monkeys
  218. Seed dispersal by forest chimpanzees in Uganda
  219. Indices of Habitat-wide Fruit Abundance in Tropical Forest
  220. Locomotor response to predator threat in red colobus monkeys
  221. Observations on Synchronous Air Breathing in Clarias liocephalus
  222. Why Swim Upside down?: A Comparative Study of Two Mochokid Catfishes
  223. Mangabey (Cercocebus albigena) population density, group size, and ranging: A twenty-year comparison
  224. Eutrophication of fresh waters: Principles, problems and restoration
  225. Nocturnal primates of kibale forest: Effects of selective logging on prosimian densities
  226. Integrated Conservation-Development Projects: A Case Study Evaluation
  227. Perspectives in Tropical Forestry
  228. Quality Values
  229. Frugivores and Fruit Syndromes: Differences in Patterns at the Genus and Species Level
  230. Defining Subgroup Size in Fission-Fusion Societies
  231. Measuring Chimpanzee food Abundance.
  232. Range use of the forest chimpanzees of Kibale: Implications for the understanding of chimpanzee social organization
  233. Estimators of Fruit Abundance of Tropical Trees
  234. Arnold Colin Woodmansey
  235. Variation in the Structure of Poecilia gillii Populations
  236. Balanites wilsoniana: elephant dependent dispersal?
  237. Wildlife Use: A Step Toward Conservation?
  238. Use of male blue monkey “Pyow” calls for long-term individual identification
  239. Group size and stability: Why do gibbons and spider monkeys differ?
  240. Population Dynamics of the Fish Poecilia gillii (Poeciliidae) in Pools of an Intermittent Tropical Stream
  241. Producers, Scroungers, and Group Foraging
  242. The Foraging Itinerary of Spider Monkeys: When to Eat Leaves?
  243. Reproductive Biology of Captive Capybaras
  244. Field Methods for Capture and Measurement of Three Monkey Species in Costa Rica
  245. Density and Growth Rate of Some Tropical Dry Forest Trees: Comparisons between Successional Forest Types
  246. Manipulating foraging group size: spider monkey food calls at fruiting trees
  247. Spider monkey alarm calls: honest advertisement or warning kin?
  248. Dietary variability in primate populations
  249. Reproductive biology of captive and free-ranging spider monkeys
  250. Ecological Constraints on Group Size in Three Species of Neotropical Primates
  251. Variability in spider monkeys' vocalizations may provide basis for individual recognition
  252. Dietary Differences between Neighboring Cebus capucinus Groups: Local Traditions, Food Availability or Responses to Food Profitability?
  253. Sex Ratio in Primates: A Test of the Local Resource Competition Hypothesis
  254. Primate Seed Dispersal: The Fate of Dispersed Seeds
  255. Post-Weaning Resource Competition and Sex Ratios in Spider Monkeys
  256. Spider monkey sleeping sites: Use and availability
  257. Patterns of foraging and range use by three species of neotropical primates
  258. Patch Use and Patch Depletion By the Spider and Howling Monkeys of Santa Rosa National Park, Costa Rica
  259. Spider monkey home ranges: A comparison of radio telemetry and direct observation
  260. Social responses to the traumatic injury of a juvenile spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi)
  261. Flexibility in Diets of Three Species of Costa Rican Primates
  262. Selection of secondary growth areas by vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops)
  263. Behavioural development of howling monkey twins (Alouatta palliata) in Santa Rosa National Park, Costa Rica
  264. Boa constrictor Predation and Group Response in White-Faced Cebus Monkeys
  265. Territoriality in the St Kitts vervet, Cercopithecus aethiops
  266. Direct Observation of Habitat Utilization by Northern Pike
  267. A Demographic Model of Colonization by a Population of St. Kitts Vervets
  268. Speciation of tropical rainforest primates of Africa: insular biogeography
  269. New Music in London
  270. New Music in London
  271. A 12-Year Phenological Record of Fruiting: Implications for Frugivore Populations and Indicators of Climate Change
  272. Locomotor behavior in Ugandan monkeys
  273. Population Structure of Black Howlers (Alouatta pigra) in Southern Belize and Responses to Hurricane Iris
  274. Behavioral Patterns of Colobus in Logged and Unlogged Forests
  275. Variation in the Diets of Cercopithecus Species: Differences within Forests, among Forests, and across Species
  276. How Does the Golden Monkey of the Virungas Cope in a Fruit-Scarce Environment?