NEW-WORLD PRIMATES, NEW FRONTIERS - INSIGHTS FROM THE WOOLLY SPIDER MONKEY, OR MURIQUI (BRACHYTELES-ARACHNOIDES)

被引:71
作者
STRIER, KB
机构
[1] Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 53706, Wisconsin
关键词
dispersal; female choice; muriqui; New World primates; sexual dimorphism;
D O I
10.1007/BF02193693
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Despite over 25 years of intensive research, much of our knowledge of primate behavior has been limited to a small number of Old World, semiterrestrial species. With the exception of chimpanzees, these species share consistent patterns of behavior, including aggressive competition between males, male dominance over females, male dispersal and female kin groups, that have come to characterize the Order Primates. However, as research has expanded to include a number of newly studied species, such generalizations about primate behavior are no longer appropriate. Data presented on the wooly spider monkey, or muriqui (Brachyteles arachnoides), provide examples of the ways in which traditional views of primate behavior are being reconsidered. In muriquis, and in several other New World monkeys, female kin groups do not occur because females disperse from their natal groups. In addition, aggressive competition between males is virtually absent; and, female muriquis appear to be codominant with males. Constraints on sexual dimorphism may help to explain why muriquis (and other New World primates) differ so fundamentally from the better known semi-terrestrial Old World monkeys. © 1990 Plenum Publishing Corporation.
引用
收藏
页码:7 / 19
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1986, CHIMPANZEES GOMBE PA
[2]  
AYRES JM, 1981, THESIS U AMAZONAS MA
[3]  
BALDWIN JD, 1981, ECOLOGY BEHAV NEOTRO, V1, P227
[4]   MATING PATTERNS IN SQUIRREL-MONKEYS (SAIMIRI-OERSTEDI) - IMPLICATIONS FOR SEASONAL SEXUAL DIMORPHISM [J].
BOINSKI, S .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 1987, 21 (01) :13-21
[5]  
Cant J. G. H., 1977, THESIS U CALIFORNIA
[6]  
CARPENTER C. R., 1934, COMPAR PSYCHOL MONOGR, V10, P1
[7]   SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND SOCIAL COGNITION IN NONHUMAN-PRIMATES [J].
CHENEY, D ;
SEYFARTH, R ;
SMUTS, B .
SCIENCE, 1986, 234 (4782) :1361-1366
[8]   SEXUAL DIMORPHISM, SOCIONOMIC SEX-RATIO AND BODY-WEIGHT IN PRIMATES [J].
CLUTTONBROCK, TH ;
HARVEY, PH ;
RUDDER, B .
NATURE, 1977, 269 (5631) :797-800
[9]  
Crockett C.M., 1987, P54
[10]   EVOLUTION OF BEHAVIORS REGULATING DENSITY AND AGE-SPECIFIC SEX-RATIOS IN A PRIMATE POPULATION [J].
DITTUS, WPJ .
BEHAVIOUR, 1979, 69 :265-+