A Field Study of the Behavior and Social Relations of Howling MonkeysJohns Hopkins Press, 1934 - 168 pages |
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Page 8
... plants and trees from the island have been identified by Standley . Chap- man ( 17 ) has observed and listed over 230 species of birds . The studies of Chapman ( 17 ) and Enders ( 26 ) show that the island has almost a complete sampling ...
... plants and trees from the island have been identified by Standley . Chap- man ( 17 ) has observed and listed over 230 species of birds . The studies of Chapman ( 17 ) and Enders ( 26 ) show that the island has almost a complete sampling ...
Page 24
... Plant specimens . A col- lection was made of specimens of food eaten by howlers . These plant specimens were preserved , numbered , and sent to a specialist on Central American flora for identification . B. REACTIONS OF HOWLERS TO AN ...
... Plant specimens . A col- lection was made of specimens of food eaten by howlers . These plant specimens were preserved , numbered , and sent to a specialist on Central American flora for identification . B. REACTIONS OF HOWLERS TO AN ...
Page 40
... plant are eaten . Guttiferae Calophyllum longifolium Willd . María . From this tall forest tree , I have fre- quently seen howlers feed on the leaves , but I have not found evidence of their eating the fruit which it bears . Clusia ...
... plant are eaten . Guttiferae Calophyllum longifolium Willd . María . From this tall forest tree , I have fre- quently seen howlers feed on the leaves , but I have not found evidence of their eating the fruit which it bears . Clusia ...
Contents
R CARPENTER | 2 |
Review of literature on the natural history of howling monkeys | 12 |
Territoriality and nomadism 43 L | 43 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
adult females adult males aequatorialis Alouattinae apparently approached Azara Barro Colorado Island become behave Berkeley capuchin monkeys capuchins census cent chimpanzee clan males close Coiba Island complemental males consorts coöperative coördination copulation Coto region defensive described eaten fallen young feeding feet females and young frequently fruit function Gatun Lake groups of howlers howler clans Howler females howler groups howler population howling monkeys individuals juvenile juvenile animals leaves limb located locomotion lodge tree months mother move observed occur ocelot oestrous female palliata Panama Paraguay period of coverage period of intromission PLATE platyrrhine play play-fighting positions postures primary forest primary sexual activity primates Puerto Armuelles react reactions Rengger responses rhythmic tongue movements roars seconds sexual behavior Shannon situations social relations socionomic specific spider monkeys stimulation subgrouping tail tendency territorial range tion UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA vocal patterns vocalizations yards young animals young howlers