10 results on '"Li, Baoguo"'
Search Results
2. Maternal caretaking behavior towards a dead juvenile in a wild, multi-level primate society.
- Author
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Yang, Bin, Anderson, James R., Mao, Min, Wang, Kaifeng, and Li, Baoguo
- Subjects
PRIMATES ,MACAQUES ,DEAD ,MONKEYS ,APES ,PSYCHOLOGICAL factors ,INFANTS - Abstract
Maternal caretaking and transport of dead infants are widespread among nonhuman primates, having been reported in numerous species of monkeys and apes. By contrast, accounts of such behaviors toward dead juveniles are scarce. Here, we describe responses by the mother and other group members to the death of a juvenile in a wild, multi-level group of Sichuan snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana). Following the juvenile's fatal accident, his mother transported and cared for the corpse for four days. Immature monkeys belonging to the same one-male unit, and some individuals from other social units also showed interest in and tended the corpse. Comparisons of this case with those involving the deaths of infants and an adult female in the same population highlight possible effects of physiological, psychological and emotional factors in primate thanatological responses, and provide an additional perspective on the origin and evolution of compassionate acts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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3. Human activities and elevational constraints restrict ranging patterns of snub‐nosed monkeys in a mountainous refuge.
- Author
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HUANG, Pengzhen, BIAN, Kun, HUANG, Zhipang, Li, Qi, DUNN, Derek W., FANG, Gu, LIU, Jiahui, WANG, Mengyao, YANG, Xianfeng, PAN, Ruliang, GAO, Cunlao, SI, Kaichuang, LI, Baoguo, and QI, Xiaoguang
- Subjects
GOLDEN snub-nosed monkey ,MONKEYS ,HOME range (Animal geography) ,SATELLITE telemetry ,FOOD transportation ,SPECIES distribution ,ALTITUDES - Abstract
Both natural conditions and anthropogenic factors affect the survivability, distribution, and population density of wildlife. To understand the extent and how these factors drive species distributions, a detailed description of animal movement patterns in natural habitats is needed. In this study, we used satellite telemetry to monitor elevational ranges favored by endangered golden snub‐nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana), in the Qinling Mountains, central China. We investigated the abundance and distribution of food resources through sampling vegetation quadrats at different elevations and sampled anthropogenic activities using field surveys. Our results indicated that although there was no significant variation in food resources between low‐ (<1500 m) and middle‐elevations (1500–2200 m), monkeys were found most often in areas above 1500 m, where there was less anthropogenic development (e.g. houses and roads); however, monkeys rarely ranged above 2200 m and had limited food availability at this altitude. There was limited human disturbance at this elevation. We suggest that both human activity and ecological constraints (i.e. food resources) have considerable effects on elevational use of R. roxellana in the Qinling Mountains. This study highlights the critical roles these factors can play in shaping the vertical distribution of high‐altitude primates. This research provides useful insights for habitat‐based conservation plans in which human disturbance management and habitat restoration should be prioritized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
4. Sexual interference and allomaternal behavior as predictors of rank recognition in female golden snub-nosed monkeys.
- Author
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Zhao, Haitao, Li, Jiaxuan, Wang, Yan, Li, Nianlong, Wang, Xiaowei, Wang, Chengliang, Ren, Yi, Jia, Ting, Li, Wei, Pan, Ruliang, and Li, Baoguo
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GOLDEN snub-nosed monkey ,MONKEYS ,FEMALES - Published
- 2021
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5. Cold and hungry: combined effects of low temperature and resource scarcity on an edge‐of‐range temperate primate, the golden snub‐nose monkey.
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Hou, Rong, Chapman, Colin A., Jay, Ollie, Guo, Songtao, Li, Baoguo, and Raubenheimer, David
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LOW temperatures ,PRIMATES ,TEMPERATURE effect ,MACAQUES ,DECIDUOUS forests ,MONKEYS ,SKIN temperature ,VASOCONSTRICTION - Abstract
Both biotic and abiotic factors play important roles in influencing ecological distributions and niche limits. Where biotic and abiotic stressors co‐occur in space and time, homeostatic systems face a scenario in which stressors can compound to impose a challenge that is greater than the sum of the separate factors. We studied the homeostatic strategies of the golden snub‐nosed monkey Rhinopithecus roxellana, a species living in temperate deciduous forests at the edge of the global distribution range for folivorous primates, to cope with the co‐occurrence of cold temperatures and resource scarcity during winter. We discovered that in winter the monkeys experience a dietary energy deficit of 101 kJ mbm−1 d−1 compared with calculated needs, despite increased feeding. This is partly offset by behavioral changes (reduced locomotion and increased resting) and reducing skin temperature by an average of 3.2°C through a cutaneous vasoconstriction to decrease heat loss. However, their major strategy is ingesting surplus energy and accumulating fat reserves when food was not limiting during summer and autumn. Their 14% of body mass lost over the winter represented an energy yield of 102 kJ mbm−1 d−1, which closely matched the calculated winter energy deficit of 101 kJ mbm−1 d−1. However, the latter value assumes that all the 75.41 kJ mbm−1 d−1 of protein ingested in winter was available for energy metabolism. This is almost certainly an over‐estimate, suggesting that the study population was in negative energy balance over the study period. Our study therefore suggests that despite its suit of integrated homeostatic responses, the confluence of low temperatures and resource limitation during winter places this edge‐of‐range primate close the threshold of what is energetically viable. It also provides a framework for quantitative models predicting the vulnerability of temperate primates to global change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Using unmanned aerial vehicles with thermal‐image acquisition cameras for animal surveys: a case study on the Sichuan snub‐nosed monkey in the Qinling Mountains.
- Author
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HE, Gang, YANG, Haitao, PAN, Ruliang, SUN, Yewen, ZHENG, Pengbin, WANG, Jinghua, JIN, Xuelin, ZHANG, Jingjie, LI, Baoguo, and GUO, Songtao
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ZOOLOGICAL surveys ,MOUNTAINS ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,MACAQUES ,MONKEYS ,BODY size - Abstract
Following significant developments in technology, alternative devices have been applied in fieldwork for animal and plant surveys. Thermal‐image acquisition cameras installed on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have been used in animal surveys in the wilderness. This article demonstrates an example of how UAVs can be used in high mountainous regions, presenting a case study on the Sichuan snub‐nosed monkey with a detection rate of 65.19% for positive individual identification. It also presents a model that can prospectively predict population size for a given animal species, which is based on combined initial work using UAVs and traditional surveys on the ground. A great potential advantage of UAVs is significantly shortening survey procedures, particularly for areas with high mountains and plateaus, such as the Himalayas, the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, Hengduan Mountains, the Yunnan‐Gui Plateau and Qinling Mountains in China, where carrying out a traditional survey is extremely difficult, so that species and population surveys, particularly for critically endangered animals, are largely absent. This lack of data has impacted the management of endangered animals as well as the formulation and amendment of conservation strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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7. Nutrient Balancing by Captive Golden Snub-Nosed Monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana).
- Author
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Chen, Stephanie T., Luo, Xi, Hou, Rong, Raubenheimer, David, Ji, Weihong, Jin, Xuelin, Jiang, Zhi, Yu, Xuewei, Wang, Jiajia, Li, Min, Guo, Songtao, and Li, Baoguo
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MONKEYS ,ORGANISMS ,ANIMAL nutrition ,CARBOHYDRATES ,DIET - Abstract
An organism's fitness is tied closely to its ability to obtain food. However, many foods are nutritionally suboptimal on their own, forcing an individual to develop a feeding strategy that actively manages both type and amount of food consumed. Animals in captivity are additionally limited to human provisioned diets, which may be nutritionally inadequate and negatively affect behavior and health. We studied the nutritional intake of captive golden snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana) at two locations in China (132 days of continuous, sunrise to sunset focal samples of 7 individuals at each site) and used the Geometric Framework for nutrition to identify their feeding strategy and evaluate diet variation across sites, seasons, and age-sex classes. Captive golden snub-nosed monkeys had a mean nutrient intake of 75% carbohydrates (15% neutral detergent fiber, 60% total nonstructural carbohydrates), 12% fat, and 13% protein (by energy) that differed by location and season owing to differences in the type and amount of food items offered and consumed. Intake at one location differed from that of wild golden snub-nosed monkeys, suggesting that the captive diet was inadequate. These results highlight the importance of developing nutritionally adequate diets for captive animals based on an understanding of their nutritional requirements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. Kinship promotes affiliative behaviors in a monkey.
- Author
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Ren, Yi, Huang, Kang, Guo, Songtao, Pan, Ruliang, Derek, Dunn W, Qi, Xiaoguang, Wang, Xiaowei, Wang, Chengliang, Zhao, Haitao, Yang, Bin, Li, Fangfang, and Li, Baoguo
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GOLDEN snub-nosed monkey ,KINSHIP ,MULTILEVEL models ,MONKEYS - Abstract
In social mammals, kinship is an important factor that often affects the interactions among individuals within groups. In primates that live in a multilevel society, kinship may affect affiliative patterns between individuals at different scales within the larger group. For this study, we use field observations and molecular methods to reveal the profiles of how kinship affects affiliative behaviors between individuals in a breeding band of wild golden snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana). We use a novel nonparametric test, the partition Mantel test, to measure independently the correlation between kinship and each of three affiliative behaviors. Our results show that more closely related females are more likely to groom each other. Average relatedness between adult females within the same one-male unit (OMU) is higher than that between adult females from different OMUs. We suggest that closely related females may reside in the same OMU in order to attain inclusive fitness benefits, and that kinship plays an important role in maintaining the social structure of this species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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9. Dominance rank of adult females and mating competition in Sichuan snub-nosed monkeys ( Rhinopithecus roxellana) in the Qinling Mountains, China.
- Author
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He, HaiXia, Zhao, HaiTao, Qi, XiaoGuang, Wang, XiaoWei, Guo, SongTao, Ji, WeiHong, Wang, ChengLiang, Wei, Wei, and Li, BaoGuo
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GOLDEN snub-nosed monkey ,ANIMAL courtship ,COMPETITION (Biology) ,SOCIAL hierarchy in animals ,MAMMAL reproduction ,MONKEYS ,POLYGYNY - Abstract
Dominance hierarchy reflects resource competition in male primates as well as females. In this study, we collected data on the social rank and mating competition of female Sichuan snub-nosed monkeys from September 2009 to June 2010 in the Qinling Mountains, Shaanxi, China. Displacement was used to determine social hierarchy of the studied wild females. A total of 1223 displacement bouts between adult females and 316 mating behaviors within one-male units (OMUs) were recorded. Competitive displacement among females was very low (0.22 displacements per observation hour). The dominant ranks of females in target OMUs were determined by displacement, from one OMU to another: JB unit: YL > DBC > YCM >XBC > BD; JZT unit: XHW > JG > DT; PK unit: QQ > TM > HF; LP unit: SK > TH > WM. Higher-ranking females performed significantly more sexual behavior than lower-ranking females in this rare monkey. High-ranking females were more likely to win mating contests within those OMUs. Based on these studies, we assessed the social relationships among adult females and clarified possible explanations for the strategies of female mating competition in the OMUs. Furthermore, the notion that reproductive success may also be related to female dominance hierarchies in this polygynous species should be considered in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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10. A high-quality genome assembly for the endangered golden snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus roxellana).
- Author
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Wang, Lu, Wu, Jinwei, Liu, Xiaomei, Di, Dandan, Liang, Yuhong, Feng, Yifei, Zhang, Suyun, Li, Baoguo, and Qi, Xiao-Guang
- Subjects
RHESUS monkeys ,GENE families ,MONKEYS ,ENDANGERED species ,CHROMOSOMES - Abstract
Background The golden snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus roxellana) is an endangered colobine species endemic to China, which has several distinct traits including a unique social structure. Although a genome assembly for R. roxellana is available, it is incomplete and fragmented because it was constructed using short-read sequencing technology. Thus, important information such as genome structural variation and repeat sequences may be absent. Findings To obtain a high-quality chromosomal assembly for R. roxellana qinlingensis , we used 5 methods: Pacific Bioscience single-molecule real-time sequencing, Illumina paired-end sequencing, BioNano optical maps, 10X Genomics link-reads, and high-throughput chromosome conformation capture. The assembled genome was ∼3.04 Gb, with a contig N50 of 5.72 Mb and a scaffold N50 of 144.56 Mb. This represented a 100-fold improvement over the previously published genome. In the new genome, 22,497 protein-coding genes were predicted, of which 22,053 were functionally annotated. Gene family analysis showed that 993 and 2,745 gene families were expanded and contracted, respectively. The reconstructed phylogeny recovered a close relationship between R. rollexana and Macaca mulatta , and these 2 species diverged ∼13.4 million years ago. Conclusion We constructed a high-quality genome assembly of the Qinling golden snub-nosed monkey; it had superior continuity and accuracy, which might be useful for future genetic studies in this species and as a new standard reference genome for colobine primates. In addition, the updated genome assembly might improve our understanding of this species and could assist conservation efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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