How Primates Eat

How Primates Eat

by Alison RichardJoanna E. Lambert Margaret A. H. Bryer and others
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 26/07/2024

Share This eBook:

  $99.99

Exploring everything from nutrients to food acquisition and research methods, a comprehensive synthesis of the study of diet and feeding in nonhuman primates.


What do we mean when we say that a diet is nutritious? Why can some animals get all the energy they need from eating leaves while others would perish on such a diet? Why don’t mountain gorillas eat fruit all day as chimpanzees do? Answers to these questions about food and feeding are among the many tasty morsels that emerge from this authoritative book. Informed by the latest scientific tools and millions of hours of field and laboratory work on species across the primate order and around the globe, this volume is an exhaustive synthesis of our understanding of what, why, and how primates eat. State-of-the-art information presented at physiological, behavioral, ecological, and evolutionary scales will serve as a road map for graduate students, researchers, and practitioners as they work toward a holistic understanding of life as a primate and the urgent conservation consequences of diet and food availability in a changing world.

ISBN:
9780226829746
9780226829746
Category:
Science: general issues
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
26-07-2024
Language:
English
Publisher:
University of Chicago Press
Alison Richard

Professor Dame Alison Richard has been the Provost of the University of Yale and the Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. As a researcher, she is widely known for her work and writings on the evolution of complex social systems among primates. This work has taken her to Central America, Northern Pakistan and, in particular, to the forests of Madagascar. Professor Richard has been working in Madagascar since 1970, when she spent 18 months studying the socioecology of sifaka, Propithecus verreauxi, for her PhD. Since 1984, in collaboration with colleagues in Madagascar and the US, her research has focused on the demography and social behaviour of the sifaka population at Beza Mahafaly, Madagascar. In 1975, with colleagues from the University of Antananarivo and Washington University, she launched the Bezà Mahafaly partnership for conservation, research and training, and she has been deeply involved in that activity ever since.

This item is delivered digitally

Reviews

Be the first to review How Primates Eat.