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Clever Monkeys

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Title: Clever Monkeys


1
Clever Monkeys
  • Part 1/6
  • Part 2/6
  • Part 3/6
  • Part 4/6
  • Part 5/6
  • Part 6/6

2
Clever Monkeys Part 1
  • Part 1/6
  • What to look for
  • Similarities to us

3
Primates in the clip
  • Marmosets (Platyrrhini Parvorder)
  • Tamarins (Platyrrhini Parvorder)

4
Primate Physical Traits Limbs
  • A tendency towards erect posture.
  • Hands and feet possess grasping ability.
  • Features of the hands and feet
  • 5 digits on hand and feet
  • Opposable thumb
  • Precision grip possible only with some Primates
  • Partially opposable great toe
  • Tactile pads enriched with sensory nerve fibers
    at the ends of digits

5
Primate Physical Traits Teeth
  • Omnivorous
  • Incisors for biting and cutting premolars and
    molars for chewing and grinding
  • Dental formula
  • Old World anthropoids have two incisors, one
    canine, two premolars, and three molars on each
    side in both upper and lower jaws 2.1.2.3 (32
    teeth total)

6
Primate Physical Traits Vision
  • Stereoscopic Vision
  • Visual images are superimposed on one another.
  • This provides for depth perception, or the
    perception of the external environment in three
    dimensions.

7
Primate Physical Traits Vision cont.
  • Binocular Vision
  • Vision characterized by overlapping visual fields
    provided for by forward-facing eyes.
  • Binocular vision is also essential to depth
    perception.

8
Primate Physical Traits Vision cont.
  • Color Vision
  • Diurnal primates have it, nocturnal ones dont

9
Primate Physical Traits Smell
  • Primates have a decreased reliance on the sense
    of smell.
  • No rhinarium worse sense of smell

10
Primate Physical Traits Locomotion
  • Quadrupedal, walk on all fours (Baboon)
  • Vertical clinging and leaping (Indiri)
  • Brachiation (Gibbon)
  • Knuckle walking (Gorilla/Chimp)

11
Primate Physical Traits Neocortex
  • The Neocortex makes up the outer portion of the
    Cerebrum. The larger the Neocortex the more
    social the animal.

Human Cerebrum
Gibbon
Wolf
12
Primate Physical TraitsEvolutionary Factors
  • Changes in diet, reliance on vision, grasping
    hands and feet came about with arboreal settings,
    forward-facing eyes (facilitate binocular
    vision), rise of angiosperms (flowering plants)

13
Clever Monkeys Part 2
  • Part 2/6
  • What to look for
  • Basic Primate Family Unit
  • Enculturation
  • Learned Behaviors
  • The Piper Plant
  • Social Behavior
  • Bonding
  • Grooming
  • Aggression

14
Primates in the clip
  • Silver Leaf Monkeys (Catarrhini Parvorder)
  • White-faced Capuchins (Platyrrhini Parvorder)

15
Primate Family Units
  • The basic social unit among all primates is the
    female and her infants.
  • Except in species in which monogamy or polyandry
    occur, males do not participate in rearing
    offspring.
  • The mother-infant relationship is often
    maintained throughout life.
  • Primates produce only a few young in whom they
    invest a tremendous amount of parental care
    (Kselected) (contrast r-selected)

16
Enculturation
  • Cultural behavior is learned it is passed from
    generation to generation through observation and
    instruction.
  • Nonhuman primate infants, through observing their
    mothers and others, learn about food items,
    appropriate behaviors, and how to use and modify
    objects to achieve certain ends.
  • More complex, chimpanzee culture includes tools
    such as termite fishing sticks and leaf sponges.

17
Social Behavior
  • Bonding
  • The role of bonding between primate mothers and
    infants was demonstrated in experiments at the
    University of Wisconsin.
  • Psychologist Harlow raised infant monkeys with
    surrogate mothers made of wire or a combination
    of wire and cloth.
  • Other monkeys were raised with no mother at all.

18
Social Behavior
  • Affiliative Behavior
  • Hugging, kissing and grooming are used in
    reconciliation.
  • Relationships are crucial to nonhuman primates
    and the bonds between individuals can last a
    lifetime.
  • Altruism, behaviors that benefit another while
    posing risk to oneself, are common in primate
    species.

19
Social Behavior
  • Grooming
  • Picking through fur to remove dirt, parasites,
    and other materials that may be present.
  • Social grooming is common among primates and
    reinforces social relationships.

20
Aggressive Interactions
  • Dominant actions can keep subordinates away from
    food and using weight loss and poor nutrition,
    threatening reproductive success of subordinates
  • Competition can result in injury and death

21
Intergroup Aggression
  • Primate groups are associated with a home range
    where they remain permanently.
  • Within the home range is a portion called the
    core area, which contains the highest
    concentration of predictable resources, and its
    where the group is most frequently found.
  • The core area can also be said to be a groups
    territory, and its the portion of the home range
    defended against intrusion.

22
Clever Monkeys Part 3
  • Part 3/6
  • What to look for
  • Natural selection acting on behavior?
  • Reproductive Behaviors and Strategies
  • Sexual Selection
  • Benefits of Group Living

23
Primates in the clip
  • Toque Macaques
  • Golden Lion Tamarin
  • Golden snub-nosed monkey
  • Emperor Tamarin
  • Proboscus monkey
  • Douc Langur of Cambodia monkey

24
Natural Selection acts on Behavior
  • A need to try everything is an extraordinary way
    to survive in the jungle. Leaves can cure you or
    kill you

25
The Evolution of Behavior
  • Behavior constitutes a phenotype, just like
    observable, physical traits do.
  • Individuals whose behavioral phenotypes increase
    reproductive fitness pass on their genes at a
    faster rate.
  • Genes do not code for specific behaviors (i.e.
    aggression, cooperation, etc.)
  • Natural selection acts on genetic factors shaped
    by ecological setting of past and present

26
Sexual Selection
  • A type of natural selection that operates on one
    sex, usually males.
  • Long-term, this increases the frequency of traits
    that lead to greater success in acquiring mates.
  • Sexual selection in primates is most common in
    species in which mating is polygynous and male
    competition for females is prominent.
  • Sexual selection produces dimorphism with regard
    to a number of traits, most noticeably body size.

27
Benefits of Group Living
  • Group living exposes animals to competition with
    other group members,
  • so why not live alone?
  • Costs of competition are offset by the benefits
    of predator defense provided by associating with
    others.
  • Group living evolved as an adaptive response to a
    number of ecological variables.

28
Clever Monkeys Part 4
  • Part 4/6
  • What to look for
  • Adaptive behavior
  • Intra and Inter-species language and symbols

29
Primates in the clip
  • Howler Monkeys (Platyrrhini Parvorder)
  • Black and White Colobus (Catarrhini Parvorder)
  • Red Colobus (Catarrhini Parvorder)
  • Guenon (Catarrhini Parvorder)
  • Sooty Mangabey (Catarrhini Parvorder)
  • Diana Monkey (Catarrhini Parvorder)
  • White-faced Capuchin (Platyrrhini Parvorder)
  • Patas Monkey (Catarrhini Parvorder)

30
Language
  • Nonhuman animals havent been considered capable
    of communicating about external events, objects,
    or other animals.
  • It has been assumed that nonhuman animals use a
    closed system of communication, where
    vocalizations dont include references to
    specific external phenomena.

31
Koko the Gorilla
  • The Gorilla Foundation
  • Clip of Koko
  • Want to volunteer or get a job with Koko at
    Stanford? Go Here

Koko and Penny Patterson
32
Clever Monkeys Part 5
  • Part 5/6
  • What to look for
  • Dominance Hierarchies
  • Communication methods
  • Stress-related diseases in large societies
  • Benefits of group living

33
Primates in the clip
  • Baboons
  • (Catarrhini Parvorder)
  • Geladas
  • (Catarrhini Parvorder)

34
Dominance Hierarchies
  • Many primate societies are organized into
    dominance hierarchies that impose order and
    establish parameters of individual behavior.
  • Higher-ranking animals have greater access to
    preferred food items and mating partners than
    lower ranking individuals.
  • Dominance hierarchies are sometimes called
    pecking orders that change throughout ones
    life and are learned

35
Factors that Influence Dominance Status
  • Sex
  • Age
  • Aggression
  • Time in the group
  • Intelligence
  • Motivation
  • Mothers social position

36
Communication
  • Basics
  • Any act that conveys information to another
    individual.
  • Frequently, the result of communication is a
    change in the behavior of the recipient.
  • Communication may be the result of involuntary
    processes or a secondary consequence of an
    intentional action.

37
Communication
  • Raised body hair is an example of an autonomic,
    or unintentional, response.
  • Gestures, facial expressions, and vocalizations
    are examples of deliberate communication.
  • The fear grin, seen in all primates, indicates
    fear and submission.
  • Grooming serves to indicate submission or
    reassurance.
  • Displays communicate emotional states.

38
Benefits of Group Living
  • Predation
  • Primates are vulnerable to many predators,
    including snakes, birds of prey, leopards, wild
    dogs, lions, and even other primates.
  • Where predation pressure is high, large
    communities are advantageous.
  • These may be multi-male, multi-female groups or
    congregations of one-male groups.

39
Benefits of Group Living
  • Relationships with Nonpredatory Species
  • Many primate species associate with other primate
    and nonprimate species for various reasons,
    including predator avoidance.

40
Benefits of Group Living
  • Dispersal
  • Members of one sex leave the group in which they
    were born when they become sexually mature.
  • Individuals who leave find mates outside their
    natal group, so dispersal is believed to decrease
    the likelihood of close inbreeding.

41
Clever Monkeys Part 6
  • Part 6/6
  • What to look for
  • Tool usage
  • Intelligence

42
Primates in the clip
  • Bearded Capuchin (Platyrrhini Parvorder)

43
Intelligence
  • Mental capacity ability to learn, reason, or
    comprehend and interpret information, facts,
    relationships, and meanings.
  • The capacity to solve problems, whether through
    the application of previously acquired knowledge
    or through insight.
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