Create a visual study guides for the second module: Non-Human Primates (Lectures 7-12 + Labs 3-5). The main goal of the visual s
Create a visual study guides for the second module: Non-Human Primates (Lectures 7-12 + Labs 3-5).
The main goal of the visual study guide is for you to demonstrate the most important topics covered in the course through your own point of view. We want to see how you reinterpret and connect the ideas discussed in the course in a bigger picture. Think of it as a tool for yourself, or a product that would let you explain to anyone who is not in the class what are the most important take-aways from this module.
Your Visual Study Guide can be done in several formats: a mindmap (https://www.mindmapping.com/ (Links to an external site.)), an infographic (https://piktochart.com/formats/infographics/ (Links to an external site.)), a drawing/painting, or even an animation. The important thing is that you demonstrate how the main topics in the course connect to specific subtopics, which in turn are related to ideas or facts.
If you want to see some cool examples of how to build a nice and effective mind map, check this out: https://www.mindmeister.com/blog/mind-map-examples/ (Links to an external site.)
The Visual Study Guide should include at least the following information:
- 3-5 main topics discussed in the lectures or labs.
- How the main topics relate to their subtopics, and what are the related ideas or facts in each subtopic (again, see the link above for good examples).
- If possible, demonstrate how the main topics are connected as well.
- Include 1-3 important things to know about each main topic.
- Make connections about how these main topics help us understand human evolutionary history and diversity.
- Include at least 1 exciting fact per main topic: highlight a super cool/awesome/exciting fact that called your attention during the lectures and labs.
- Whenever relevant, include images and maps to support your related ideas or facts. (You can draw your own images or use one from the internet/lectures).
Finally, be creative!
Primate Social Behavior 2
Anthropology 2200
Non-residential pattern aspects primate behavior
• Competition • Cooperation • Culture • Parenting behaviors • Tool use • Language
Social Strategies
Male Competition
• Male reproductive strategy competition for mates
• Produce lots of offspring • Prevent other males from doing
the same thing • Intimidation • Fighting • Leads to sexual selection
• Body size / canine dimorphism
Mandrill: Coloration = health Tooth size
Uakari: Color = health and dominance
Male Competition
• Sperm competition
• Relationship between:
• Testes size
• Penis size
• More competition = larger size
Female Competition
• Female reproductive strategy competition for resources
• Ensure the survival of offspring
• Dominance relationships • Access to resources
Female Baboon hierarchy
Competition
• Aggressive behaviors • Direct eye contact • Raising eyebrows • Baring canines • Charging
Gelada Baboons
Competition
• Subordination • Ritualized behavior
• Showing backside • Cowering • Presenting to groom • Greeting with friendly facial
expressions and vocalizations
• Intended to ease tension • Prevent conflict
Unequal Pay – Primate Jealousy
• Differences in food quality • Personal jealousy?
Capuchin monkeys and equity
Cooperation
• Affiliative behaviors • Promote group
cohesion • Assurance • Pleasure • Reciprocity
Cooperation
• Form of Altruism • Behavior that benefits others while being a
disadvantage to the individual • Grooming/playing • Hunting/Food sharing • Caregiving • Attacking predators • Giving warning calls
• Kin selection • Behavior that increases the fitness of those
closely related to the individual • Usually the focus of altruistic behavior • Increases the donor’s inclusive fitness
• Reproductive success of organism and close kin
Cooperation
• Grooming to remove parasites and dead skin
• Maintains close contact between family members and non-related group members
• Eases tension • Promotes group cohesion
Chimpanzee grooming
Cooperation
• Playing • Maintains close contact between family
members and non-related group members • Eases tension • Promotes group cohesion
Bonobos Playing
Cooperation
• Caring for young that are not yours • Alloparenting
• Individual other than parent cares for the infant
• Usually done by females (in some species, males also contribute)
Capuchin Monkey
Squirrel Monkey
Cooperation
• Attacking predators and giving warning calls • Allows other members of the group to
escape
• Might lead to injury or death
Vervet Monkey did not survive….
Baboon did survive
Cooperation
• Group Hunting/Foraging • Find food more efficiently • Might find food/hunt prey that you
could not get as an individual • Have to share • Might get injured during hunt
Chimpanzee hunting
Cooperation
• Warfare • Observed in chimps • Group fights between chimps over
territory • Often kill neighboring males • Territory = access to food resources
Chimpanzee patrol composed of primarily
males
Chimpanzee raids
Chimpanzee politics
So where do these behaviors come from? Parenting
• Prolonged period of development • Prolonged period of parental care • Allows parents to teach offspring how to succeed
socially/in environment • Parents VERY important!
Parenting • 1950s psychological experiments (Harry Harlow)
• Demonstrated parenting = not just nourishment • Monkey’s taken from mothers shortly after birth • Raised alone in cages: wire “nourishing” mother, cloth
mother, no mother • Preferred cloth mother = warmth, comfort, security • No mother = distressed, refused to eat, died
Parenting
• Specifics – what do primates learn from their parents?
• Non-verbal and verbal communication
• Social behavior: competition and cooperation
• Tool use • Parenting behavior • Culture!
How do we know its culture and not just inborn behavior?
• Harlow’s Experiments • Japanese Macaques
• Beach of Koshima • Wash sweet potatoes in salt water • 1 decade idea spread • From very few to most
Japanese macaques
The unique side of bonobos
Culture: Examples • Tool use: Chimpanzees
• Spears and their use for hunting bush babies • Termite fishing • Chewed leaves as sponges • Rocks for breaking open nuts
Chimps spearing
Termite fishing
Culture: Examples
• Chimp grooming traditions • Differ depending on the group
• Gombe National Park, Tanzania • Groom each other by holding an overhead branch with one hand
and grooming a partner with the other • Mahale National Park, Tanzania
• Clasp hands while grooming
Gombe Mahale
Communication
• Voluntary (intentional) • e.g. postures,
vocalizations, and facial expressions
• Autonomic (unintentional)
• e.g. estrus
Voluntary Communication Example: Gorilla
• Sharp grunting: a sign of disapproval. • Chuckling: a sign of playfulness. • Screaming: a sign of alarm or warning. • High-pitched barking: a sign of curiosity. • Roaring: a sign of aggression. • Belching: a sign of contentment
Language
• Significant human development
• Communication in non- human primates:
• Emotional • Only in the present • Predator alarm system • Establish territories
Language
• Non-human primates • Many have been taught ASL
• Don’t have vocal range for human language/no syntax
• Teach others ASL • Can make references to external
objects • E.g. “go get ball outside”
• Can identify images of things in addition to the things themselves
Koko with All Ball
Koko’s sign language
- Primate Social Behavior 2
- Non-residential pattern aspects primate behavior
- Social Strategies
- Male Competition
- Male Competition
- Female Competition
- Female Baboon hierarchy
- Competition
- Gelada Baboons
- Competition
- Unequal Pay – Primate Jealousy
- Capuchin monkeys and equity
- Cooperation
- Cooperation
- Cooperation
- Chimpanzee grooming
- Cooperation
- Cooperation
- Cooperation
- Cooperation
- Chimpanzee hunting
- Cooperation
- Chimpanzee raids
- Chimpanzee politics
- So where do these behaviors come from? �Parenting
- Parenting
- Parenting
- How do we know its culture and not just inborn behavior?
- Japanese macaques
- The unique side of bonobos
- Culture: Examples
- Chimps spearing
- Termite fishing
- Culture: Examples
- Communication
- Voluntary Communication Example: Gorilla
- Language
- Language
- Koko’s sign language
,
Primate Taxonomy 1
Anthropology 2200
Examine primate classification Pygmy Marmosets
• SIZE DIVERSITY IN PRIMATES
Mouse lemur (Microcebus berthae) 3.6 inches, 1.1 oz
Adult Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) 440 lb
loris gibbon
aye aye gorilla
chimpanzee
tarsier
capuchin orangutan
spider monkey baboon
ring tailed lemur
Japanese macaque bonobo
howler monkey
mouse lemur
Primates • What is a Primate?
• Kingdom Animalia • Phylum Chordata • Class Mammalia • Order Primates • Suborders:
• Strepsirhines (Lemur, Loris, Galago) • Infraorder: Lemuriformes
• Haplorhines (Tarsiers, Monkeys, Apes, and Humans)
• Infraorders: • Tarsiiformes • Anthropoidea (Parvorders =
Platyrrhini and Catarrhini) • Slender Loris
Taxonomy
Cladistic Taxonomy: Haplorhini/Strepsirrhini Nomenclature preferred by many
• Places Tarsiers in with Haplorhines • Many believe this system is more evolutionarily accurate!
Tarsiers
Strepsirhines vs. Haplorhines
• Strepsirhines: lemurs, lorises, galagos
• Haplorhines: everything else (tarsiers, New World Monkeys, Old World Monkeys, Apes, humans)
• They split around 55-80 million years ago
Slender Loris Galago/Bush Baby Ring Tailed Lemur
Strepsirhines
Ring-tailed lemur
Strepsirhines
• Found in Africa and Asia (13% of Primates)
• Retain many primitive characteristics
• This does not mean that they are the ancestors of monkeys!!!
High rates of nocturnality • Primitive Trait
• Tapetum lucidum • Layer behind the
retina • Reflects visible light
back through the retina
• Improves vision in low light conditions
Sportive Lemur Retina
Post Orbital Bar: No Closure
Primitive Trait
Partially stereoscopic vision (primitive)
Lack color vision (primitive)
Reliance on Olfaction • Communication for nocturnal animals
• Ancestral trait • Scent glands
• Marking • Messages
• Large olfactory bulb • Part of brain for scent
• Rhinarium moist nose • readily picks up
scents
Mouse Lemur
Ring Tail Lemur
Grooming claw • Primitive Trait
• Lemurs, Galagos, Lorises: 2nd Toe (Aye-Aye = 2-5)
• Purpose: • Grooming • Extracting insects
Ruffled Lemur
Galago
Tooth comb
• Derived Trait • Used for:
• Grooming • Extracting resin
from trees Ring Tailed Lemur
Lemuroidea : Lemurs
• Only found on the island of Madagascar
• Only non-human primate found there
• Lots of diversity • 20 mya split from Africa • Adaptive radiation • Represent 21% of primate
genera worldwide
Lemuroidea : Lemurs
• Ring-tailed lemur • More terrestrial • Black and white ringed tail • Omnivorous • Diurnal • Forest and spiny scrub • Highly social • Female dominant
• Common in Lemurs • Sent marking • Stink Fighting
Lemuroidea : Lemurs
• Mouse lemur • Smallest primate • < 1 lb. • Eat insects, small vertebrates,
gum, fruit, flowers, nectar, leaves
• Nocturnal
Grey mouse lemur
Additional Traits
Tend to have more specialized diets and behaviors than anthropoids (derived)
• Often fill very specific niches • Lemurs on Madagascar
Vertical clinging and leaping Often solitary
Sifaka Clinging
Sifaka
Lemuroidea : Aye-aye
Aye-aye • Nocturnal • Mainly insectivorous • Thin middle finger to forage for
grubs Taps to find grubs Gnaws bark Uses finger to pull out grubs
• Solitary
Aye-aye
Lorisoidea: Lorises
• Lorises • Tropical Africa and
Southeast Asia • Nocturnal • Slow-moving,
deliberate stalkers of small prey
Lorisoidea: Lorises
• Slow loris • Toxic bite
• Lick gland on their arm • Secretion activates with
saliva (adult/baby) • Communicate by sent
marking • Eat small animals, fruit, gum,
vegetation • Hunted for exotic pet trade
The Bite of a Slow Loris How poisonous is the slow
loris? • Allergen similar to Felid 1 Cat allergen in dander Anaphylactic shock Red blood cells in urine
Depends how allergic you are!
Lorisoidea: Galagos
• “Bush-babies” – Subfamily of Lorises
• Sub-Saharan Africa • Nocturnal • Vertical clingers and leapers • Insectivorous
Lorisoidea: Galagos Can turn its head over 180
degrees Index finger more widely
spaced • Feeding • Gripping branches
Nocturnal • Large Eyes • Large Ears
Haplorhini
Tarsiers, monkeys, apes, and humans
• Larger body • Larger brain-to-body size ratio • More sexually dimorphic • Less specialized dentition (fewer premolars) • Greater reliance on vision than on smell • Post-orbital closure • Diurnal rather than nocturnal
Differ from Strepsirhines in a variety of ways
Tarsiers vs. all other Haplorhines
• Tarsiers are taxonomically problematic
• Prosimian/anthropoid
• Strepsirhine/haplorhine • They possess a mixture of
primitive and derived traits • Divergence time of ca. 50-
70 Million years ago?
Infraorder: Tarsiiformes (Tarsiers) • Tarsiers
• Southeast Asia • Nocturnal
• eye larger than brain • Vertical clingers and
leapers • Grooming claw: 2nd and 3rd
Toes • Highly carnivorous
• Lizards, frogs, insects
Tarsiiformes: Tarsiers
Name refers to two elongated tarsals – extra leverage for leaping
Tarsiers
- Primate Taxonomy 1
- Examine primate classification
- Slide Number 3
- Slide Number 4
- Slide Number 5
- Primates
- Slide Number 7
- Taxonomy
- Strepsirhines vs. Haplorhines
- Strepsirhines
- Ring-tailed lemur
- Strepsirhines
- High rates of nocturnality
- Post Orbital Bar: No Closure
- Reliance on Olfaction
- Grooming claw
- Tooth comb
- Lemuroidea : Lemurs
- Lemuroidea : Lemurs
- Lemuroidea : Lemurs
- Grey mouse lemur
- Additional Traits
- Sifaka
- Lemuroidea : Aye-aye
- Aye-aye
- Lorisoidea: Lorises
- Lorisoidea: Lorises
- The Bite of a Slow Loris
- Lorisoidea: Galagos
- Lorisoidea: Galagos
- Haplorhini
- Tarsiers vs. all other Haplorhines
- Infraorder: Tarsiiformes (Tarsiers)
- Tarsiiformes: Tarsiers
- Tarsiers
,
Primate Taxonomy 2
Anthropology 2200
Infraorder: Anthropoidea
Infraorder: Anthropoidea Two Parvorders
Platyrrhini “Broad-nosed
Catarrhini “Hook-nosed”
2:1:3:3/2 2:1:2:3
Anthropoids: Platyrrhini • Central/South American
Monkeys
• Latin and South America
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea
• Central/South American monkeys • Arboreal quadrupeds
• Suspensory locomotion • Many = Prehensile tail • Not in African/Asian Monkeys
• Diverse diet • Leaves, fruit, insects
Spider Monkey
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea
• Two Families • Atelidae
• Howler, Owl, Spider, Titi, and Woolly monkeys, Uakaris, and Sakis
• Cebidae • Marmosets, Tamarins,
Capuchins, Squirrel Monkeys
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea: Cebidae
• Marmosets/Tamarins • Retain claws instead of
nails • Smallest Platyrrhini • Twin (Chimerism) • Insectivores • Unusual dental
formula • 2:1:3:2
Golden Lion Tamarin Silvery Marmoset
Emperor tamarin
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea: Cebidae
• Capuchin monkeys • Name from Order of Friars
Minor Capuchin • Often in Movies!
White Fronted Capuchin
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea: Atelidae
• Includes subfamilies: • Aotidae • Pitheciidae • Atelidae • Alouattinae
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea: Atelidae
• Owl/Night Monkey • Only truly nocturnal monkey
• Vocal calls/Sent Marking • Susceptible to human forms of
Malaria • Used for malaria research
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea: Atelidae
• Pitheciidae • Titis • Sakis • Uakaris
White Faced SakiUakari
Titi Monkeys (morning calls) Uakari Saki
Bald uakari monkey
Platyrrhini: Ceboidea: Atelidae
• Spider monkeys • Wooly monkeys
• Only
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