High Altitude Primates /
Autor Corporativo: | |
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Otros Autores: | , , |
Formato: | eBook |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
New York, NY :
Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,
2014.
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Edición: | 1st ed. 2014. |
Colección: | Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects,
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Materias: |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- High Altitude Prosimian Primates
- 1. Effects of Altitude on the Conservation Biogeography of Lemurs in South East Madagascar
- 2. Hibernation patterns of dwarf lemurs in the high altitude forests of eastern Madagascar
- 3. Altitudinal Distribution and Ranging Patterns of Pygmy Tarsiers (Tarsius pumilus)
- High Altitude Monkeys
- 4. Biogeography and conservation of Andean primates in Peru
- 5. Population density and ecological traits of high land woolly monkeys at Cueva de los Guacharos National Park, Colombia
- 6. Seed Dispersal by Woolly Monkeys in Cueva de los Guacharos National Park (Colombia): An amazonian primate dispersing montane plants
- 7. Distribution and ecology of the most tropical of the high-elevation montane colobines: the ebony langur on Java
- 8. Snow tolerance of Japanese macaques inhabiting high-latitude mountainous forests of Japan
- 9. Seasonal and altitudinal migration of Japanese macaques in the Northern Japan Alps
- 10. Rhinopithecus bieti at Xiaochangdu, Tibet: Adaptations to a marginal environment
- 11. Nutritional implications of the high-elevation lifestyle of Rhinopithecus bieti
- 12. Variation in primate abundance along an elevational gradient in the Udzungwa
- 13. Deriving Conservation Status for a High Altitude Population: Golden Monkeys of Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda
- High Altitude Apes.- 14. High Altitude Diets: Implications for the Feeding and Nutritional Ecology of Mountain Gorillas
- 15. Preliminary data on the highland Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii) of Batang Toru
- 16. Modern Human Biological Adaptations to High-Altitude Environments in the Andean Archaeological Record.-17. High Altitude Primates, Extreme Primates, and Anthropological Primatology (There is More to Human Evolution than Tool Use, Culture, or African Apes). .