[HTML][HTML] Co-evolution in context: the importance of studying gut microbiomes in wild animals

KR Amato - Microbiome Science and Medicine, 2013 - psjd.icm.edu.pl
Co-evolution in context: The importance of studying gut microbiomes in wild animals -
Microbiome Science and Medicine - Volume 1, Issue 1 (2013) - PSJD - Yadda Skip to main …

Linking social foraging behaviour with individual time budgets and emergent group-level phenomena

HH Marshall, AJ Carter, JM Rowcliffe, G Cowlishaw - Animal Behaviour, 2012 - Elsevier
A social group's time budget is an emergent property of individual-level decisions about how
to allocate time. One fundamental determinant of these time allocation decisions is foraging …

[PDF][PDF] Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes verus) Behavioral Responses to Stresses Associated With Living in a Savanna-Mosaic Environment: Implications for Hominin …

JD Pruetz, P Bertolani - PaleoAnthropology, 2009 - paleoanthropology.org
Anthropologists have long been interested in the behavioral ecology of nonhuman primates
living in savannas given what we know of early hominin environments. As expected …

Microhabitat selection by sea turtles in a dynamic thermal marine environment

G Schofield, CM Bishop, KA Katselidis… - Journal of Animal …, 2009 - JSTOR
1. Reproductive fitness is often compromised at the margins of a species' range due to sub-
optimal conditions. 2. Set against this backdrop, the Mediterranean's largest loggerhead sea …

Water, plants, and early human habitats in eastern Africa

CR Magill, GM Ashley… - Proceedings of the …, 2013 - National Acad Sciences
Water and its influence on plants likely exerted strong adaptive pressures in human
evolution. Understanding relationships among water, plants, and early humans is limited …

The costs of living at the edge: Seasonal stress in wild savanna-dwelling chimpanzees

EG Wessling, HS Kühl, R Mundry, T Deschner… - Journal of Human …, 2018 - Elsevier
Adaptations associated with shifting from a predominately forested habitat to a more open
environment are considered a crucial step in hominin evolution. Understanding how …

Why be diurnal? Or, why not be cathemeral?

RA Hill - Folia Primatologica, 2006 - karger.com
As a behavioural strategy, cathemerality is thought to confer considerable advantages by
allowing animals to extend activity flexibly into either the diurnal or nocturnal phase in …

Evidence of cave use by savanna chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) at Fongoli, Senegal: implications for thermoregulatory behavior

JD Pruetz - Primates, 2007 - Springer
Much attention has been paid to how humans both adapt and acclimate to heat stress,
primarily due to the relevance of these issues to hominid evolution in open Plio-Pleistocene …

Coping with a challenging environment: effects of seasonal variability and reproductive status on glucocorticoid concentrations of female baboons (Papio …

LR Gesquiere, M Khan, L Shek, TL Wango… - Hormones and …, 2008 - Elsevier
Environmental stressors impact physiology and behavior in many species of animals. These
effects are partly mediated through changing concentrations of glucocorticoids, which also …

Behavioral flexibility of vervet monkeys in response to climatic and social variability

R McFarland, L Barrett, R Boner… - American journal of …, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
Responses to environmental variability sheds light on how individuals are able to survive in
a particular habitat and provides an indication of the scope and limits of its niche. To …