673 results on '"TAMARINS"'
Search Results
152. Isolation and identification of fungi from vaginal flora in three species of captive Leontopithecus.
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Moraes, Ismar A., Stussi, Jussara S.P., Lilenbaum, Walter, Pissinatti, Alcides, Luz, Fabio P., and Ferreira, Ana Maria R.
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FUNGI , *VAGINAL diseases , *LION tamarins , *TAMARINS , *REPRODUCTION , *MICROORGANISM populations , *CANDIDA - Abstract
The ability to reproduce in captivity is an essential component of lion tamarin (Leontopithecus) conservation programs. However, infections such as vaginitis, cervicitis, and endometritis are important diseases that may influence the reproduction of these animals. Therefore, it is important to detect continuous or occasional vaginal microbial populations, and to understand their potential role as an endogenous source of infection [Collins, 1964; Blue, 1983; Pugh et al., 1986]. Vaginal swabs were collected from 25 female tamarins of the three currently available species (L. rosalia, L. chrysopygus, and L. chrysomelas) at the Center of Primatology in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The swabs were processed according to standard mycological protocols, and isolates were biochemically characterized. Fungal isolates were recovered from 16 animals (64.0%). The results showed that 70.6% of the isolated microorganisms consisted of yeast, including three species of Candida (mainly C. glabrata). We suggest that this species is a resident member of the normal vaginal flora in Leontopithecus. Filamentous fungi (mainly from Trichosporon, Aspergillus, and Penicillium genera) constituted 29.4% of the isolates, and were considered to be transitory contaminants of the genital area. We suggest that colonization of the vaginal environment is related to the endocrine pattern associated with the reproductive status of these animals, but not to parity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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153. In Vivo Analysis of the 3' Untranslated Region of GB Virus B after In Vitro Mutagenesis of an Infectious cDNA Clone: Persistent Infection in a Transfected Tamarin.
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Jae-Hwan Nam, Faulk, Kristina, Engle, Ronald E., Govindarajan, Sugantha, St. Claire, Marisa, and Bukh, Jens
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HEPATITIS C virus , *VIRUSES , *MUTAGENESIS , *CIRCULAR DNA , *CLONING , *INFECTION , *TAMARINS - Abstract
GB virus B (GBV-B), the virus most closely related to hepatitis C virus (HCV), infects tamarins and causes acute hepatitis. The 3' untranslated region (UTR) of an infectious GBV-B clone (pGBB) has a proximal short sequence followed by a poly(U) tract and a 3' terminal sequence. Our investigators previously demonstrated that the 3' terminal sequence was critical for in vivo infectivity. Here, we tested the effect of deleting the short sequence and/or the poly(U) tract from pGBB; infectivity of each mutant was tested by intrahepatic transfection of two tamarins with transcribed RNA. A mutant lacking both regions was not viable. However, mutants lacking either the short sequence or the poly(U) tract were viable. All four tamarins had a wild-type-like acute infection and developed acute hepatitis. Whereas we found that five tamarins transfected with the wild-type clone pGBB had acute resolving infection, one tamarin transfected with the poly(U) deletion mutant became persistently infected. This animal had viremia and hepatitis until its death at week 90. The genomes recovered at weeks 2, 7, 15, 20, 60, and 90 lacked the poly(U) stretch. Eight amino acid changes were identified at week 90. One change, in the putative p7 protein, was dominant at week 15. Thus, persistence of GBV-B, like persistence of HCV, was associated with the emergence of virus variants. Four tamarins inoculated with serum collected at weeks 2 and 90 from the tamarin with persistent infection had an acute resolving infection. Nonetheless, the demonstration that GBV-B can persist in tamarins strengthens its relevance as a surrogate model for the study of HCV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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154. Influence of the mother's reproductive state on the hormonal status of daughters in marmosets (Callithrix kuhlii).
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Puffer, Alyssa M., Fite, Jeffrey E., French, Jeffrey A., Rukstalis, Michael, Hopkins, Elizabeth C., and Patera, Kimberly J.
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MARMOSETS , *REPRODUCTION , *HORMONES , *HUMAN anatomy , *TAMARINS - Abstract
Behavioral and endocrine suppression of reproduction in subordinate females produces the high reproductive skew that characterizes callitrichid primate mating systems. Snowdon et al. [American Journal of Primatology 31:11–21, 1993] reported that the eldest daughters in tamarin families exhibit further endocrinological suppression immediately following the birth of siblings, and suggested that dominant females exert greater control over subordinate endocrinology during this energetically challenging phase of reproduction. We monitored the endocrine status of five Wied's black tufted-ear marmoset daughters before and after their mother delivered infants by measuring concentrations of urinary estradiol (E2), pregnanediol glucuronide (PdG), testosterone (T), and cortisol (CORT). Samples were collected from marmoset daughters 4 weeks prior to and 9 weeks following three consecutive sibling-litter births when the daughters were prepubertal (M=6.1 months of age), peripubertal (M=11.9 months), and postpubertal (M=17.6 months). The birth of infants was associated with reduced ovarian steroid excretion only in the prepubertal daughters. In contrast, ovarian steroid levels tended to increase in the postpubertal daughters. Urinary E2 and T levels in the postpubertal daughters were 73.8% and 37.6% higher, respectively, in the 3 weeks following the birth of infants, relative to prepartum levels. In addition, peak urinary PdG concentrations in peri- and postpubertal daughters were equivalent to luteal phase concentrations in nonpregnant, breeding adult females, and all of the peri- and postpubertal daughters showed clear ovulatory cycles. Cortisol excretion did not change in response to the reproductive status of the mother, nor did the concentrations change across age. Our data suggest that marmoset daughters of potential breeding age are not hormonally suppressed during the mother's peripartum period or her return to fertility. These findings provide an additional example of species diversity in the social regulation of reproduction in callitrichid primates. Am. J. Primatol. 64:29–37, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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155. Proximate mechanisms of reproductive monopolization in male moustached tamarins (Saguinus mystax).
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Huck, Maren, Lottker, Petra, and Heymann, Eckhard W.
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TAMARINS , *REPRODUCTION , *PHYSIOLOGY , *GENDER , *FERTILITY - Abstract
In moustached tamarin (Saguinus mystax) groups, the single breeding female mates polyandrously with most or all nonrelated adult males. Nonetheless, paternity is monopolized in many groups by a single male. No evidence for male endocrine suppression has been found in this species. The proximate mechanisms of monopolization thus remain poorly understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the possible impact of agonistic interactions and mate-guarding on the monopolization of paternity in male moustached tamarins. Furthermore, we evaluated the likely costs of these behaviors, and whether olfactory cues might be used for its timing. We used behavioral data on proximity, agonistic interactions, time budgets, and scent-marking behavior to answer these questions. While direct agonistic competition does not play a prominent role, fertile females were consorted in some periods by one male, the sire of the previous and next litter. Consorting was instigated nearly exclusively by the male. It probably occurred during the female's periods of highest fertility, and thus likely functions as mate-guarding. The timing of the consortship was probably guided by olfactory cues in the female's scent marks. While we did not obtain direct evidence for energy costs in terms of increased energy expenditure or decreased food intake, we found that consorting males are more conspicuous and therefore may be more vulnerable to predators. Am. J. Primatol. 64:39–56, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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156. Endocrine Correlates of Reproductive Status in Breeding and Nonbreeding Wild Female Moustached Tamarins.
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Löttker, Petra, Huck, Maren, Heymann, Eckhard W., and Heistermann, Michael
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TAMARINS , *REPRODUCTION endocrinology , *ANIMAL breeding , *LACTATION , *PREGNANCY in animals , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
In callitrichid primates, reproduction is usually restricted to a single female per group. Reproductive rate is high and the occurrence of a postpartum estrus can lead to simultaneous lactation and pregnancy. In contrast, nonreproductive females often show ovarian inactivity. However, most studies on callitrichid reproductive physiology have been conducted in captivity, where conditions differ considerably from those in the wild, so that reproductive conditions may be strongly modified. Using fecal estrogen and progestogen measurements to monitor female reproductive status in 2 groups of wild moustached tamarins (Saguinus mystax), we examined 1) whether reproductive females in free-ranging groups also show postpartum estrus and 2) whether nonreproductive females demonstrate signs of ovarian activity. In both reproductive females, clear changes in the excretion pattern of progestogen and estrogen metabolites over time in combination with information on parturition dates allowed us to differentiate between pregnancy, a period of postpartum ovarian inactivity lasting for 54 and 64–82 days, and a period of ovarian activity before conception. Nonreproductive females demonstrated temporal fluctuations in hormone concentrations and absolute hormone levels that were similar to ones in the breeding females during the phase of ovarian activity. The results suggest that, in contrast to most captive female tamarins, reproductive females in wild groups of moustached tamarins do not have a postpartum estrus and that nonreproductive females show ovarian activity despite the presence of a breeding female. We therefore conclude that findings from captivity should be only carefully compared to the situation in the wild. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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157. A Two-Choice Preference Assessment With Five Cotton-Top Tamarins (Saguinus oedipus).
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Fernandez, Eduardo J., Dorey, Nicole R., and Rosales-Ruiz, Jesús
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COTTONTOP tamarin , *EVALUATION , *SAGUINUS , *TAMARINS , *ANIMAL welfare , *ANIMAL social behavior - Abstract
A study selected 5 cotton-lop tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) located at the Frank Buck Zoo in Gainesville, Texas, for a food preference assessment. The study used a paired-choice procedure across 7 different food items for all 5 tamarins. Preferences for the food items across all the tamarins varied, although general trends were noted as well. This article discusses the benefits of using paired-choice preference assessments in zoo settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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158. The many faces of helping: possible costs and benefits of infant carrying and food transfer in wild moustached tamarins (Saguinus mystax).
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Huck, Maren, Löttker, Petra, and Heymann, Eckhard W.
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TAMARINS , *PRIMATES , *REPRODUCTION , *HELPING behavior , *ANIMAL genetics - Abstract
Various hypotheses about adaptive and non-adaptive mechanisms of non-parental infant care have been put forward for different taxa (Emlen et al., 1991). The Neotropical callitrichid primates are renowned for their cooperative care of the twin litters. None of the studies conducted in the wild included information on genetic relationships within groups. This, however, is indispensable to evaluate the relevance of competing hypotheses concerning direct or indirect fitness gains. We studied two groups of wild moustached tamarins with known genetic relationships over a one-year period to examine individual time-budgets and contributions to infant carrying and food-transfer. With these data we tested whether helping behaviour might be a non-adaptive trait and, if not, whether indirect benefits via kin-selection could be excluded as an evolutionary force maintaining it. Other hypotheses on direct fitness benefits were discussed as far as (anecdotal) data permitted. Changes in time-budgets suggest costs, thus clearly refuting hypotheses assuming non-adaptivity. High within-group relatedness suggests kin-selection to be one driving force of maintaining the trait. However, non-parental individuals may help despite low relatedness. Data were not sufficient to decide which possible direct benefits most likely play a role in inducing non-relatives to help. Yet, two (non-exclusive) explanations seem to be the most probable ones: The chance to inherit the main-breeding position, and a certain chance of own direct reproductive success (the latter only for male helpers) due to polyandrous mating by the female. Other adaptive mechanisms may enhance benefits but are unlikely to be major selective forces since fitness gains are presumably rather small or uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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159. Stereology of the Liver in Three Species of Leontopithecus (Lesson, 1840) Callitrichidae – Primates.
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Burity, C. H. F., Pissinatti, A., and Mandarim#De Lecerda, C. A.
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STEREOLOGY , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology , *VERTEBRATES , *LIVER , *PRIMATES , *TAMARINS - Abstract
Studies on liver morphology and stereology are relevant to the comparative anatomical and pathological research. They also facilitate the use of non-human primates in basic research, which has substantially supported studies in human medicine. Quantitative studies of liver structures have also been more extensive in Old World primates and other vertebrates. Twenty-three livers of adult lion tamarins were studied (six Leontopithecus rosalia, seven Leontopithecus chrysomelas, and 10 Leontopithecus chrysopygus), dissected, and fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin solution. For stereological quantification, the liver was regarded as consisting of parenchyma (hepatocytes) and stroma (non-hepatocytes). The volume density ( Vv) was determined by point counting, and the disector method was used to obtain the numerical density of hepatocytes ( Nv). Hepatic stereological differences among the three species of lion tamarins were not statistically significant. Therefore, the pooled Vv[hepatocyte] and Vv[stroma] could be determined as 96.2 and 7.4%, respectively, and Nv[hepatocyte] as 500.33 × 106 cm−3 . Significantly different, the values found for Vv[hepatocyte] and Nv[hepatocyte] in lion tamarins were, respectively, 0.09 and 2.8 times greater than those in baboons, and 0.17 and 3.8 times greater than those in man. However, the Vv[stroma] was 1.04 times smaller than that in baboons and 1.79 times smaller than that in man. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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160. Forest Use and Activity Patterns of Callimico goeldii in Comparison to Two Sympatric Tamarins, Saguinus fuscicollis and Saguinus labiatus.
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Porter, Leila M.
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TAMARINS , *SAGUINUS , *FOREST animals , *ANIMAL populations , *ECOLOGICAL niche , *HABITATS - Abstract
Callimico goeldii, Saguinus fuscicollis, and S. labiatus are sympatric in northern Bolivia and differ from each other in patterns of spatial and structural use of their environment. C. goeldii has a home range five times larger than that of mixed-species troops of S. fuscicollis and S. labiatus. The larger overlapping home range of C. goeldii allows it to move among Saguinus troops, giving it access to a wide range of different microhabitats. All three species use the most common microhabitat in the area, primary forest with dense understory, more than any other microhabitat type. C. goeldii habitat use varies by season, with bamboo and Heliconia microhabitats used more during the dry season. Each species shows preferences for different height classes: C. goeldii is found almost exclusively in the understory, S. fuscicollis uses the understory and middle canopy, and S. labiatus is found mostly in the middle canopy. These height class preferences are reflected in each species' locomotor styles, with C. goeldii showing the highest rates of vertical clinging and leaping, and S. labiatus showing the highest rates of branch-to-branch leaping and quadrupedal movement. The results suggest that C. goeldii may be restricted to forests with dense understory and a mosaic of other microhabitats. Furthermore, C. goeldii does not appear to use its tegulae for large branch foraging, but rather for vertical clinging and leaping between small vertical supports. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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161. Contributed Abstracts.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *RHESUS monkeys , *PRIMATES , *TAMARINS , *MACAQUES - Abstract
Presents several abstracts for articles on primatology. "Acoustic and Behavioral Analyses of Gecker Distress Vocalizations in Young Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)," by E. R. Patel and M. J. Owren; "Nursery Rearing of Nonhuman Primates: Review of the Nomenclature, Methods and Outcomes," by C. Ferrier; "Prolactin Levels Predict Relationship Quality in Cotton-top Tamarins (Saguinus oedipus)," by S. E. McCutcheon, C. T. Snowdon and T. E. Ziegler; "Physiological Correlates of Maternal Style in Free-ranging Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)," by S. Howell, G. Westergaard, A. Cleveland and J. D. Higley.
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- 2004
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162. Contributed Abstracts.
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BIOLOGY , *CHIMPANZEES , *KRA , *TAMARINS , *PRIMATES - Abstract
Presents several abstracts for articles on primatology. "Chimpanzees' (Pan troglodytes) Response to Inequity in An Experimental Exchange Paradigm," by S. F. Brosnan, H. C. Schiff and F. B. de Waal; "Promiscuous or Selective? A Pair Choice Test in Female Long-tailed Macaques (Macaca fascicularis)," by E. Nikitopoulos, M. Heistermann, H. de Vries, J. A. van Hooff and E. H. Sterck; "Social Learning in Cotton-top Tamarins (Saguinus oedipus): Cost and Benefits of Following the Leader," by L. R. Moscovice and C. T. Snowdon; "New Perspectives in MesoAmerican Primatology: Conservation, Behavior and Ecology," by A. Estrada, P. Garber, M. Pavelka and L. Luecke.
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- 2004
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163. Validation of urinary cortisol as an indicator of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function in the bearded emperor tamarin (Saguinus imperator subgrisescens).
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McCallister, Josephine M., Smith, Tessa E., and Elwood, Robert W.
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HYDROCORTISONE , *PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *HYPOTHALAMIC-pituitary-adrenal axis , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay , *URINALYSIS , *TAMARINS , *PRIMATES - Abstract
The use of cortisol levels as a measure of stress is often complicated by the use of invasive techniques that may increase hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity during sample collection. The goal of this study was to collect samples noninvasively and validate an enzyme-immunoassay (EIA) for the measurement of cortisol in urine to quantify HPA axis activity in the bearded emperor tamarin (Saguinus imperator subgrisescens). Urine samples were collected from trained subjects between 0700 and 0730 hr during a 1-month period, and were pooled for immunological validation. We validated the assay immunologically by demonstrating specificity, accuracy, precision, and sensitivity. For biological validation of the assay, we showed that levels of urinary cortisol (in samples collected between 0700 and 1700 hr) varied significantly across the day. Cortisol concentration was lowest at 0700 hr, increased to a mid-morning peak (0900 hr), and declined across the remainder of the day in a typical mammalian circadian pattern. We thus demonstrate that urinary cortisol can be used to quantify HPA activity in S.i. subgrisescens. Am. J. Primatol. 63:17-23, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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164. Antiphonal Responses to Loud Contact Calls Produced by Saguinus oedipus.
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Jordan, Kerry, Weiss, Daniel, Hauser, Marc, and McMurray, Bob
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ANIMAL calls , *COTTONTOP tamarin , *TAMARINS , *PERCEPTION in animals , *ANIMAL behavior , *PRIMATES - Abstract
We report the results of an experiment designed to investigate whether captive cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus ) selectively call back to an absent cagemate. We removed 2 individuals living in separate cages (cycling through the colony so that each individual was removed 10 times) from the homeroom and played back calls produced by one of them. The caller's cagemate, residing in the homeroom, was more likely to be the first individual to call back antiphonally than any other individual in the colony was. In support of previous work using both habituation-discrimination and phonotaxic techniques, our results show that cotton-top tamarins can recognize cagemates and possibly individuals by voice alone, and that the antiphonal playback method provides yet another tool for investigating acoustic perception in nonhuman primates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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165. Use of spatial, visual, and olfactory information during foraging in wild nocturnal and diurnal anthropoids: A field experiment comparing Aotus, Callicebus, and Saguinus.
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Bicca-Marques, Júlio César and Garber, Paul A.
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SPATIAL ability , *COGNITIVE ability , *SOCIAL ecology , *SENSE organs , *TAMARINS , *THREE-striped night monkey - Abstract
Early in their evolution, the ancestors of anthropoid primates radiated from a nocturnal to a diurnal niche. Foraging during the night differs from foraging during the day in terms of the availability of light and color cues, and in the movement of odor molecules through the canopy. In this study, we compared the ability of nocturnal and diurnal New World monkeys to use perceptual cues (i.e., the sight or smell of food) and spatial information (place predictability) in within-patch foraging decisions. An experimental field study was conducted on wild groups of night monkeys (Aotus nigriceps), tamarins (Saguinus imperator imperator and S. fuscicollis weddelli), and titi monkeys (Callicebus cupreus) at the Zoobotanical Park/UFAC, Rio Branco, Brazil. Our research design included the construction of feeding stations located in the home range of the study groups. Each feeding station consisted of eight visually identical feeding platforms located in a circular arrangement. In all test settings, two platforms at each feeding station contained a food reward (banana), and the remaining six platforms contained a sham reward (yellow plastic or inaccessible banana). In the night-monkey experiments, each feeding platform was illuminated by a 40-W red bulb to aid the researcher in observing their behavior. When the location of reward sites was predictable over time, individuals in all four species successfully relocated food rewards based solely on spatial information. Each species was also successful in using visual information to distinguish real from sham food rewards. However, only night monkeys and one group of emperor tamarins used olfactory information alone to locate food rewards. Overall, the species' performances did not clearly differentiate Aotus from diurnal New World primates in these experiments. Am. J. Primatol. 62:171–187, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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166. Disseminated lethal Encephalitozoon cuniculi (genotype III) infections in cotton-top tamarins (Oedipomidas oedipus)—a case report
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Reetz, Jochen, Wiedemann, Maximilian, Aue, Angelika, Wittstatt, Ulrich, Ochs, Andreas, Thomschke, Angelika, Manke, Heide, Schwebs, Monika, and Rinder, Heinz
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NOSEMA cuniculi , *TAMARINS , *COTTON , *IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
For the first time, Encephalitozoon (E.) cuniculi genotype III (‘dog strain’) was verified in two cotton-top tamarins (Oedipomidas oedipus) by light microscopy, immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, PCR and sequencing. The animals had a disseminated lethal infection with this protist. In earlier reports, genotype III had been found only in domestic dogs, man, emperor tamarins (Saguinus imperator) and golden lion tamarins (Leontopithecus rosalia). This investigation establishes now that the ‘dog strain’ can occur in cotton-top tamarins too. This is further evidence for the zoonotic potential of E. cuniculi. Furthermore, free E. cuniculi spores were identified also in blood vessels of several tissues. These findings indicate that during a disseminated infection E. cuniculi spores can occur in peripheral blood, too. We propose that blood should also be included in the investigations for the detection of microsporidia, so that a possible disseminated course of an infection can be detected. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2004
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167. Responsiveness of expectant male cotton-top tamarins, Saguinus oedipus, to mate's pregnancy
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Ziegler, Toni E., Washabaugh, Kate F., and Snowdon, Charles T.
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TAMARINS , *COTTONTOP tamarin , *PREGNANCY , *GLUCOCORTICOIDS - Abstract
In the cotton-top tamarin, a primate where paternal care is critical to the survival of the offspring, we found that expectant fathers experienced multiple hormonal changes during their mate''s pregnancy. Fathers that had experienced several previous births showed significant changes in urinary estrogens, androgens, prolactin and cortisol in the last 2 months before birth, whereas less-experienced fathers (LEF) did not. The female''s midpregnancy rise in glucocorticoids was followed within 1–2 weeks by a peak of cortisol and corticosterone in her paired male in 70% of all males and 100% of all experienced males. Examination of behavioral interactions between the pairs did not reveal changes in rates of interactions between the experienced pairs over pregnancy. However, the less-experienced pairs had significantly higher levels of affiliative and sexual interactions. Therefore, behavioral communication between the pair did not appear to account for the hormonal changes occurring within the experienced fathers (EF). The midpregnancy rise of glucocorticoids in females may stimulate a glucocorticoid response in male tamarins and thereby activate other hormonal changes in males to prepare them for their parenting role. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2004
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168. Changes in locomotor and foraging skills in captive-born, reintroduced golden lion tamarins (Leontopithecus rosalia rosalia).
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T.S. Stoinski and B.B. Beck
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LIONS , *TAMARINS , *CONSERVATION (Psychology) , *ABILITY , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
The behavior of reintroduced, captive-born animals is understudied, limiting the scientific understanding and utility of reintroduction as a conservation tool. This work describes changes in locomotor and foraging behaviors in captive-born golden lion tamarins over the first 18 months after their release into the wild. The subjects included 73 individuals living in and around the Poco das Antas Biological Reserve in Brazil between 1984 and 1996. The differences between animals that survived 6 months after release and those that did not indicate that initial deficiencies in locomotor and foraging abilities are related to survival. Behavioral changes in both juvenile and adult individuals during the first 6 and 18 months after release appear to be primarily related to locomotor abilities; however, the effect of provisioning on foraging abilities is unknown. Juvenile animals showed a larger number of changes relative to adults during the first 6 and 18 months, suggesting that placing tamarins into complex environments early in development may promote the expression of natural behaviors and increase survival opportunities after their release. However, when this is not possible, the best mechanism for reintroducing adult members of this species involves intensive post-release support rather than pre-release training, which confers few behavioral advantages. Recommendations for future reintroductions with this and other species include introducing animals to complex environments early in development, and collecting data systematically. Am. J. Primatol. 62:113, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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169. Representing tools: how two non-human primate species distinguish between the functionally relevant and irrelevant features of a tool.
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Santos, Laurie R., Miller, Cory T., and Hauser, Marc D.
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TOOLS , *RHESUS monkeys , *ANIMAL behavior , *LEARNING in animals , *ANIMAL intelligence - Abstract
Few studies have examined whether non-human tool-users understand the properties that are relevant for a tool's function. We tested cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) and rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) on an expectancy violation procedure designed to assess whether these species make distinctions between the functionally relevant and irrelevant features of a tool. Subjects watched an experimenter use a tool to push a grape down a ramp, and then were presented with different displays in which the features of the original tool (shape, color, orientation) were selectively varied. Results indicated that both species looked longer when a newly shaped stick acted on the grape than when a newly colored stick performed the same action, suggesting that both species perceive shape as a more salient transformation than color. In contrast, tamarins, but not rhesus, attended to changes in the tool's orientation. We propose that some non-human primates begin with a predisposition to attend to a tool's shape and, with sufficient experience, develop a more sophisticated understanding of the features that are functionally relevant to tools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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170. Leaders of progressions in wild mixed-species troops of saddleback (Saguinus fuscicollis) and mustached tamarins (S. mystax), with emphasis on color vision and sex.
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Andrew C. Smith, Hannah M. Buchanan-Smith, Alison K. Surridge, and Nicholas I. Mundy
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FRUIT , *PRIMATES , *FORESTS & forestry , *TAMARINS - Abstract
Leadership of travel progression is an important aspect of group living. It is widely believed that trichromacy evolved to facilitate the detection and selection of fruit in the dappled light of a forest. Further, it has been proposed that in New World primate species, which typically contain a range of color vision phenotypes, at least one female in a group will be trichromatic (i.e., having three types of visual pigment, in contrast to the two types of pigment found in dichromatic individuals) and will lead the group to fruiting trees. We examine progression leadership within two wild mixed-species troops of saddleback (Saguinus fuscicollis) and mustached (Saguinus mystax) tamarins over a complete year. As whole units, the mixed-species troops were most frequently led by a mustached tamarin. This is the first time that mixed-species group leadership and individual leadership have been quantified in these tamarin species. In terms of single-species intragroup leadership, neither the visual status (dichromatic or trichromatic) nor the sex of individuals had a consistent effect across species. Saddleback tamarin groups were led by males more frequently than females, while evidence suggests that mustached tamarins may be female-led. The notion that all groups contain at least one trichromatic female that leads the troop to feeding trees was not supported. Am. J. Primatol. 61:145157, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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171. Give unto others: genetically unrelated cotton-top tamarin monkeys preferentially give food to those who altruistically give food back.
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Marc D. Hauser, M. Keith Chen, Frances Chen, and Emmeline Chuang
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ALTRUISTIC behavior in animals , *FOOD , *TAMARINS , *PRIMATES - Abstract
Altruistic food giving among genetically unrelated individuals is rare in nature. The few examples that exist suggest that when animals give food to unrelated others, they may do so on the basis of mutualistic or reciprocally altruistic relationships. We present the results of four experiments designed to tease apart the factors mediating food giving among genetically unrelated cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus), a cooperatively breeding New World primate. In experiment 1 we show that individuals give significantly more food to a trained conspecific who unilaterally gives food than to a conspecific who unilaterally never gives food. The apparent contingency of the tamarins' food-giving behaviour motivated the design of experiments 2-4. Results from all three experiments show that altruistic food giving is mediated by prior acts of altruistic food giving by a conspecific. Specifically, tamarins do not give food to unrelated others when the food received in the past represents the by-product of another's selfish actions (experiments 2 and 3) or when a human experimenter gives them food (experiment 4) as did the unilateral altruist in experiment 1. By contrast, if one tamarin gives another food without obtaining any immediate benefit, then the recipient is more likely to give food in return. Overall, results show that tamarins altruistically give food to genetically unrelated conspecifics, discriminate between altruistic and selfish actions, and give more food to those who give food back. Tamarins therefore have the psychological capacity for reciprocally mediated altruism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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172. REPORT Can dogs defy gravity? A comparison with the human infant and a non-human primate.
- Author
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Osthaus, Britta, Slater, Alan M., and Lea, Stephen E.G.
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GRAVITY , *EXPERIMENTAL psychology , *INFANT psychology , *DOG behavior , *TAMARINS , *REWARD (Psychology) , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
We conducted four experiments with 56 adult dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) involving tasks where food was dropped through an opaque tube connected either vertically or diagonally to one of two or three goal boxes. In the first experiment, modelled after studies with children and primates, the dogs first searched significantly more often in the location directly beneath the drop-off point (a gravity bias), although this box was not connected with the tube. These results are comparable to those of human infants and cotton-top tamarins. Experiments 2–4 tested which problem solving strategy the dogs applied to find the food. Results show that they do not understand the physical mechanism of the tube itself, and they apply one of three search strategies: search the gravity box (the one below the drop-off box); search the box in the middle; learn the correct location of the goal box. When the goal box was in the same location the dogs learned to search there over trials, that is, they learned to ‘defy gravity’, but when the location of the goal box changed over trials they showed no learning. These findings are compared with those from human infants and cotton-top tamarins: like these species, the dogs can learn to overcome a gravity bias, but only when the reward is to be found in a consistent location. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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173. Effects of Passage Through Tamarin Guts on the Germination Potential of Dispersed Seeds.
- Author
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Knogge, Christoph, Herrera, Emérita R. Tirado, and Heymann, Eckhard W.
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GERMINATION , *TAMARINS , *SEED stratification - Abstract
Passage through tamarin guts may have an effect on seed germination potential. To examine these effects, and the variation between 2 sympatric tamarin species, we studied Saguinus mystax and S. fuscicollis in northeastern Peruvian Amazonia. For most of 39 plant species, neither germination success nor latency was modified by gut passage. Neutral effects on seed germination potential suggest that tamarins may fulfill criteria for effective seed dispersal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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174. Colour discrimination learning in black-handed tamarin ( Saguinus midas niger).
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Pessoa, Daniel, Araujo, Mariana, Tomaz, Carlos, and Pessoa, Valdir
- Abstract
Colour is one cue that monkeys use for perceptual segregation of targets and to identify food resources. For fruit-eating primates such as Saguinus, an accurate colour perception would be advantageous to help find ripe fruits at distance. The colour vision abilities of black-handed tamarins ( Saguinus midas niger) were assessed through a discrimination learning paradigm using Munsell colour chips as stimuli. Pairs of chips were chosen from an early experiment with protan and deutan humans. The monkeys (three males and one female) were tested with stimuli of the same hue, but different brightness values, in order to make sure that discriminations were based on colour rather than brightness cues. The results showed that the female, but not the males, presented an above-chance performance for stimuli resembling hue conditions under which tamarins forage (oranges vs greens). Colour vision in S. m. niger is discussed according to the advantages and disadvantages of dichromatism in daily search for food as well as to aspects regarding polymorphism in New World monkeys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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175. The effect of colour vision status on the detection and selection of fruits by tamarins (Saguinaus spp.).
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Smith, Andrew C., Buchanan-Smith, Hannah M., Surridge, Alison K., Osorio, Daniel, and Mundy, Nicholas I.
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COLOR vision , *FORAGING behavior , *TAMARINS , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Studies the effect of color vision status on detection and fruit selection by tamarins in Peru. Evolution of trichromatic color vision; Modeling of visual signals; Advantages of trichromatic foraging.
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- 2003
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176. Experimental field study of the relative costs and benefits to wild tamarins (saguinus imperator and S. fuscicollis) of exploiting contestable food patches as single- and mixed-species troops.
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Júlio César Bicca-Marques and Paul A. Garber
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TAMARINS , *PREDATION , *FORAGING behavior - Abstract
Several species of tamarins form stable mixed-species troops in which groups of each species feed, forage, rest, and travel together during much of the year. Although the precise set of factors that facilitate this ecological relationship remains unclear, predator detection and foraging benefits are presumed to play a critical role in maintaining troop stability. In this work we present data from an experimental field study designed to examine how factors such as social dominance and within-patch foraging decisions affect the costs and benefits to tamarins of visiting feeding sites as single- and mixed-species troops. Our data indicate that when they exploited contestable food patches (sets of eight feeding platforms, two of which contained a 100-g banana), each tamarin species experienced foraging costs when they arrived as part of a mixed-species troop. These costs were found to be less severe for emperor tamarins because they were socially dominant to saddle-back tamarins and could displace them at feeding sites. We conclude that the foraging benefits to tamarins residing in mixed-species troops are asymmetrical, and that at feeding sites in which the amount of food in a patch is insufficient to satiate all troop members, even minor differences in the timing of return to food patches and changes in troop cohesion have a measurable effect on the costs and benefits to participating tamarin species. Am. J. Primatol. 60:139153, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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177. Interruptibility of long call production in tamarins: implications for vocal control.
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Miller, Cory T., Flusberg, Stephen, and Hauser, Marc D.
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TAMARINS , *ANIMAL sounds - Abstract
Studies the interruptibility of combination long call (CLC) production in tamarins. Patterns of CLC interruption; Acoustic modification of CLC; Effects of interruption stimulus on CLC temporal structure.
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- 2003
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178. Play Behavior in Juvenile Golden Lion Tamarins (Callitrichidae: Primates): Organization in Relation to Costs.
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de Oliveira, Cláudia R., Ruiz-Miranda, Carlos R., Kleiman, Devra G., and Beck, Benjamin B.
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ANIMAL behavior , *VERTEBRATES , *GOLDEN lion tamarin , *ANIMALS , *TAMARINS , *WOUNDS & injuries - Abstract
Abstract Play is a complex behavior that is widespread among vertebrates. Despite the potential benefits for the development of social, cognitive and motor skills, play behavior has costs: energy expenditure, and the risks of injury and predation. As the fitness benefits of play are presumably to be gained as adults, we expect young animals to minimize its immediate costs. Here, we describe play behavior in golden lion tamarins (GLTs) (Leontopithecus rosalia ) and test cost-minimizing hypotheses. We collected data on play behavior and adult vigilance in nine groups (four wild and five supplemented, the latter deriving from a reintroduction) of wild-living lion tamarins (16 infants) in Brazil. Results showed that play occupied 3.8% of the activity budget, occurred during the hottest times of the day, and was characterized by being mainly social, involving partners of different ages, and sometimes different species. We found no differences in playing time between wild and supplemented groups. The lion tamarins played less in ‘dangerous’ substrates (canopy branches and forest floor), and more in ‘safe’ substrates (large branches and vine tangles), and favored playing in the center of the group over the periphery. The reproductive animals were vigilant during 78% of the time the infants were playing, and were mostly oriented away from the playing animals. The observed organization of play behavior suggests that juvenile GLTs minimize the risk of predation and accidental injuries, but do not seem to minimize energy expenditure and the risks of social injuries. The social-cognitive benefits acquired from experience of older partners during play may overcome the costs of the latter behavior, and because little time was spent in play, the energetic costs may be inconsequential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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179. The use of prosodic cues in language discrimination tasks by rats.
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Toro, Juan M., Trobalon, Josep B., and Sebastián-Gallés, Núria
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ANIMAL communication , *VERSIFICATION , *SPEECH perception , *RATS , *TAMARINS , *ANIMAL cognition , *ANIMAL intelligence , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Recent research with cotton-top tamarin monkeys has revealed language discrimination abilities similar to those found in human infants, demonstrating that these perceptual abilities are not unique to humans but are also present in non-human primates. Specifically, tamarins could discriminate forward but not backward sentences of Dutch from Japanese, using both natural and synthesized utterances. The present study was designed as a conceptual replication of the work on tamarins. Results show that rats trained in a discrimination learning task readily discriminate forward, but not backward sentences of Dutch from Japanese; the results are particularly robust for synthetic utterances, a pattern that shows greater parallels with newborns than with tamarins. Our results extend the claims made in the research with tamarins that the capacity to discriminate languages from different rhythmic classes depends on general perceptual abilities that evolved at least as far back as the rodents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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180. Social Communication About Unpalatable Foods in Tamarins.
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Snowdon, Charles T. and Boe, Carla Y.
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TAMARINS , *ANIMAL communication , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Many monkeys show social facilitation in sampling novel, palatable foods but not in avoiding unpalatable foods. Cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) socially learned to avoid a preferred food when it was made unpalatable but showed no aversion toward a food not made unpalatable. Only 33% sampled unpalatable tuna, and few sampled it again. In 3 of 8 groups, the socially induced aversion was long lasting, at least 15 weeks after food was made palatable again. Potential cues include facial reactions of disgust, alarm-call vocalizations, and reduction in food-associated calls. Behavioral coordination in cooperative infant care, communication about food, and well-established social relationships may explain social avoidance of unpalatable foods in tamarins and the absence of social avoidance in less cooperative species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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181. Overt fatal and chronic subclinical Encephalitozoon cuniculi microsporidiosis in a colony of captive emperor tamarins (Saguinus imperator ).
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Guscetti, F., Mathis, A., Hatt, J.-M., and Deplazes, P.
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NOSEMA cuniculi , *TAMARINS , *DISEASES - Abstract
The course of an infection with the microsporidian Encephalitozoon cuniculi in a colony of captive emperor tamarins (Saguinus imperator ) is described. In two litters, the infection was associated with overt disease and death of all infants. Immunohistochemistry for E. cuniculi showed generalized infections, and histopathologic evaluation revealed systemic vasculitis and disseminated mixed inflammatory cell infiltration with and without necrosis in several organs. Serologically, some of the juvenile animals presented with high titres for Encephalitozoon , while the adults had low titres. The E. cuniculi ‘dog strain’ was identified by molecular means for the first time in Europe. The origin of the infection appeared to be a pair of breeding adults that originated from the US. Our data suggest that the organism persisted over years in the colony, and that subclinically infected animals most likely were involved in perpetuating the infection. Efforts should be made to ascertain if this microorganism is present in other captive populations of this endangered monkey species and to prevent its further spreading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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182. Rule learning by cotton-top tamarins
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Hauser, Marc D., Weiss, Daniel, and Marcus, Gary
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LANGUAGE acquisition , *TAMARINS , *ANIMAL experimentation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONCEPTS , *LANGUAGE & languages , *LEARNING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PRIMATES , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Previous work suggests that human infants are capable of rapidly generalizing patterns that have been characterized as abstract algebraic rules (Science 283 (1999) 77), a process that may play a pivotal role in language acquisition. Here we explore whether this capacity is uniquely human and evolved specifically for the computational problems associated with language, or whether this mechanism is shared with other species, and therefore evolved for problems other than language. We used the same materials and methods that were originally employed in tests of human infants to assess whether cotton-top tamarin monkeys can extract abstract algebraic rules. Specifically, we habituated subjects to sequences of consonant–vowel syllables that followed one of two patterns, AAB (e.g. wi wi di) or ABB (le we we). Following habituation, we presented subjects with two novel test items, one with the same pattern as that presented during habituation and one with a different pattern. Like human infants, tamarins were more likely to dishabituate to the test item with a different pattern. We conclude that the capacity to generalize rule-like patterns, at least at the level demonstrated, did not evolve specifically for language acquisition, though it remains possible that infants might use such rules during language acquisition. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2002
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183. Temporal cues in the antiphonal long-calling behaviour of cottontop tamarins
- Author
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Ghazanfar, Asif A., Smith-Rohrberg, Duncan, Pollen, Alex A., and Hauser, Marc D.
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TAMARINS , *PRIMATES , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
In primates, long-range communication is often mediated by the use of ‘long’ (or ‘loud’) calls. Beyond the acoustic classification of these calls and descriptions of the behavioural context in which they are produced, few experimental studies have examined how species-typical information is encoded in the structure of these signals. We present the results of eight experimental conditions designed to isolate the mechanisms underlying the perception of long calls in cottontop tamarins, Saguinus oedipus. Our procedure involved presenting a combination of naturally produced and experimentally manipulated long calls to individuals isolated from their group, and then recording the relationship between signal design and the production of antiphonal long calls by the test subject. Tamarins did not distinguish between normal calls and time-reversed or pitch-shifted long calls, but normal response rates did require the species-typical amplitude envelope. Furthermore, there was suggestive evidence that the number of syllables and the syllable rate may also influence antiphonal calling responses. We discuss these results in terms of the mechanisms of vocal recognition in primates and other taxa. Copyright 2002 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2002
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184. Problem solving, inhibition and domain-specific experience: experiments on cottontop tamarins, Saguinus oedipus
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Hauser, Marc D., Santos, Laurie R., Spaepen, Geertrui M., and Pearson, Heather E.
- Subjects
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COTTONTOP tamarin , *TAMARINS , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
We present the results of experiments on cottontop tamarins designed to explore the relationship between problem solving, inhibitory control and domain-specific experience. The colony was divided into two groups: tool-experienced (TE) and tool-inexperienced (TI). The TE group had previously participated in a series of tool-use experiments and revealed that, when selecting a tool, they used featurally relevant dimensions (e.g. shape, material, orientation) over featurally irrelevant dimensions (e.g. colour). The TI group, although experienced in other laboratory-based experiments, had never been tested on tool or other object manipulation problems. In Phase 1, involving three conditions, all subjects were tested on a series of means–end problems involving the use of a cloth to access a piece of food. Although the correct choice always involved picking the supporting cloth, we also built in an association between the correct cloth and its colour. Once the subjects reached criterion, we reversed the association between the cloth colour and the food reward in Phase 2. If the subjects solved the problems in Phase 1 by attending to cloth colour, then in Phase 2 they should have difficulty, especially given prior findings on tamarins demonstrating that reversal learning is difficult. If the subjects solved Phase 1 by attending to the functionality of the problem (i.e. the physical/causal relationship between the cloth and food), then reversing the colours in Phase 2 should have no effect on the subjects'' performances. Finally, if the subjects attended to both colour and functionality, then reversing the colours should cause some decrement in performance, but less so than in the case where colour alone dominates. In Phase 2, although both groups showed a decrement in performance, indicating problems with reversal learning, TE subjects significantly outperformed TI subjects. Furthermore, the pattern of performance for TE subjects suggested that they had solved the initial problem by attending to a combination of colour and functionality or functionality alone, while TI subjects had attended to colour alone. We conclude that for tamarins with experience as tool users, colour represents a less salient feature, even when it is systematically associated with a food reward. For inexperienced tamarins, however, colour is salient and reversal learning is difficult. Together, these findings highlight the importance of exploring the relationship between inhibitory control and domain-specific problem solving. Copyright 2002 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2002
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185. Anterograde Projections of the Motorcortical Tongue Area in the Saddle-Back Tamarin (Saguinus fuscicollis).
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Alipour, Mehrnaz, Chen, Yan, and Jürgens, Uwe
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TAMARINS , *MOTOR cortex , *TONGUE , *BRAIN - Abstract
In the New World monkey Saguinus fuscicollis, the anterograde projections of the motorcortical tongue area were studied. Three animals were analyzed. In two, biotin dextran amine was used as tracer; in the third, Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin was used. Identification of the tongue area was carried out by electrical brain stimulation. Intracortical projections were found into the neighboring primary motor cortex, ventral premotor cortex, frontoopercular cortex, and primary and secondary somatosensory cortex. Projections also ended in the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, orbital cortex, supplementary motor area, anterior cingulate cortex and agranular as well as granular insula. In addition, weaker labeling was found in the inferior and dorsal parietal cortex, and perirhinal and inferotemporal cortex. Subcortically, there was a heavy projection into the ventral putamen, a moderate projection into the caudate nucleus and claustrum, and a weak projection into the anterior, central and lateral amygdala. In the thalamus, terminal labeling was found in the nuclei ventralis posterior medialis, ventralis lateralis, reticularis, centralis lateralis, medialis dorsalis, pulvinaris oralis, centrum medianum, reuniens and suprageniculatus in an order of intensity. Subthalamically, weak projections could be traced into the zona incerta and lateral hypothalamus. In the midbrain, labeling was found in the deep layers of the colliculus superior, area praetectalis, dorsal reticular formation and, very sparsely, in the periaqueductal gray. In the lower brainstem, fibers ended in the griseum pontis, medial and lateral parabrachial nuclei, lateral pontine and medullary reticular formation, paramedian and dorsal reticular nuclei, solitary tract nucleus and principal as well as spinal trigeminal nuclei. No terminals were found in the hypoglossal nucleus itself; there were, however, terminals in the immediately bordering reticular formation.Copyright © 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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186. Attachment and social preferences in cooperatively-reared cotton-top tamarins.
- Author
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Kostan, Karen M. and Snowdon, Charles T.
- Subjects
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TAMARINS , *ANIMAL behavior , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *DEPENDENCY (Psychology) , *ATTACHMENT behavior , *THREAT (Psychology) , *DEFENSIVENESS (Psychology) , *COOPERATIVE breeding in animals , *PRIMATES - Abstract
In many primate species a close attachment between mother and infant provides a secure base for the infant when the infant is frightened or under stress. In cooperatively breeding primates infant carrying is divided among several individuals in the group, with the mother often doing little more than nursing. In these species it is not clear which individual would best serve as a secure base for the infant. We studied eight infant cotton-top tamarins from birth through 20 weeks of age, noting who carried the infant during the first 100 days, who transferred food with the infants, and, as infants became independent, with whom they associated during social play and affiliative behavior. From week 9 to week 20, when infants were independent of carriers most of the time, we presented families with six trials (once every 2 weeks) with a threatening stimulus (a human dressed in a lab coat and wearing an animal mask). Infants played primarily with their twin or youngest sibling and had affiliative interactions with many family members. However, in fearful situations, infants ran to those who had carried them and transferred food with them the most–their father or oldest brother (never to the mother). Although adults increased rates of mobbing calls in response to the threat, infants significantly reduced their vocalization rate. For these cooperatively breeding monkeys, the attachment object for infants is the family member that invested the most effort in carrying the infant and transferring food with the infant. These results parallel and extend results from bi-parental infant care species in which the father serves as the primary attachment figure. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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187. Relative Infectivity of Hepatitis A Virus by the Oral and Intravenous Routes in 2 Species of Nonhuman Primates.
- Author
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Purcell, Robert H., Wong, Doris C., and Shapiro, Max
- Subjects
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HEPATITIS A virus , *MICROBIAL virulence , *HEPATITIS A transmission , *TAMARINS , *CHIMPANZEES , *DISEASES - Abstract
Hepatitis A virus (HAV) is naturally transmitted by the fecal-oral route but can also be transmitted intravenously. To determine the relative infectivity of these 2 routes, an infectivity titration of a standard challenge pool of virulent HAV was performed in tamarins and chimpanzees. In both species, 1 oral dose of HAV was equivalent to 10[sup4.5] intravenous doses. These findings have relevance for attempts to develop live, attenuated HAV vaccines that can be administered orally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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188. Hepatitis A Virus Infection in Tamarins: Experimental Transmission via Contaminated Factor VIII Concentrates.
- Author
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Chudy, Michael, Stahl-Hennig, Christiane, Berger, Annemarie, Nübling, C. Micha, Hunsmann, Gerhard, Rabenau, Holger F., and Löwer, Johannes
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TAMARINS , *HEPATITIS A virus - Abstract
An experimental hepatitis A virus (HAV) transmission study was performed in 3 tamarins, using a factor VIII concentrate linked to a recent outbreak of HAV infections in German hemophiliacs. The typical indicators for HAV infection were investigated in feces and serum samples. One tamarin showed a classical HAV infection with seroconversion. HAV antigen and HAV RNA were detected in feces of a second animal, but no seroconversion was observed until 19 weeks after inoculation. The HAV sequences from the reverse-transcription--and polymerase chain reaction-positive samples of the 2 animals were identical to the deduced HAV sequences of the chain of infection (from plasma pool to final product to patients). The study results provide conclusive evidence of the presence of infectious HAV in coagulation factor concentrate. Because a number of HAV transmission episodes have been described for solely solvent/detergent-treated factor VIII preparations, continued use of these agents seems questionable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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189. Sex Differences in Olfactory Communication in Saguinus labiatus.
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Smith, Tessa Ellen and Gordon, Stephen John
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SMELL , *COMMUNICATION , *SAGUINUS , *TAMARINS , *BEHAVIOR ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
We assessed behaviors involved with depositing and receiving scent in three captive heterosexual pairs of red-bellied tamarins (Saguinus labiatus ). The frequencies of scent deposition and scent investigatory behaviors differed between the sexes. Females scent marked exclusively by the anogenital gland. Males deposited 95.8% of scent marks via the anogenital gland and 4.2% via the sternal gland. Females scent marked at a significantly higher rate than that of males (0.9 ± 0.1 versus 0.3 ± 0.1 per 20 min, respectively). Males investigated the scent of their opposite-sex partners whereas females investigated no male scent. Mean ± SEM latency for males to investigate female scent was 208.7 ± 65.0 sec. Around 9% of all scent marks were overmarked within 8 min and there was a nonsignificant trend for males to overmark the scent of their female partners than vice versa. We discuss the sex differences in olfactory communication in red-bellied tamarins in terms of sexual selection theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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190. Discerning Evolutionary Processes in Patterns of Tamarin (Genus Saguinus) Craniofacial Variation.
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Ackermann, Rebecca Rogers and Cheverud, James M.
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TAMARINS , *CRANIOMETRY , *MORPHOLOGY - Abstract
Examines the evolutionary processes of cranofacial variation patterns of Tamarins. Dissociation of morphological distances among taxa with phylogeny; Consistency of interspecific variations with expected patterns of genetic drift; Deviation in the size and morphology of the cranium.
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- 2002
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191. Single-copy nuclear DNA sequences obtained from noninvasively collected primate feces.
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Surridge, Alison K., Smith, Andrew C., Buchanan-Smith, Hannah M., and Mundy, Nicholas I.
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PRIMATES , *DNA , *GENES , *TAMARINS , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *COLOR vision - Abstract
Noninvasively collected primate feces have been shown to provide a useful source of mitochondrial DNA for sequencing and nuclear microsatellite DNA for size analysis. In this study, single-copy nuclear DNA sequences were obtained from noninvasively collected fecal samples of two species of wild tamarins, Saguinus fuscicollis and S. mystax , in the context of a project on the functional utility of color vision. Noninvasive genotyping of the X-linked opsin gene is important for future studies of selection and adaptation at this locus in a number of primate species. The wide range of techniques that can now be applied successfully to DNA extracted from feces introduces a broad spectrum of potential genetic studies that can be undertaken on primates, without the need for intrusive or invasive methods. Am. J. Primatol. 56:185–190, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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192. Costs of Caregiving: Weight Loss in Captive Adult Male Cotton-Top Tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) Following the Birth of Infants.
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Achenbach, Gretchen G. and Snowdon, Charles T.
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TAMARINS , *BODY size - Abstract
We examined changes in weight for 10 captive adult male cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus ) from before the birth of infants through the first 16 weeks of infant life. Compared to before birth, males weighed significantly less in Weeks 1–4, 5–8, and 9–12 following the birth. Weights in Weeks 13–16 did not differ significantly from prebirth weights. Maximum weight loss for individual males ranged from 1.3 to 10.8% of prebirth body weight. Males in groups with fewer helpers lost significantly more weight than ones in groups with more helpers. For the 3 males that had no helper other than their mates, weight loss was particularly striking, ranging from 10.0 to 10.8% of their prebirth body weight. These results suggest that caring for infants is energetically costly, and that in this cooperatively breeding species, the presence of more individuals to share the burden of infant carrying reduces the cost to individual caregivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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193. Tracking Responses Related to Self-Recognition: A Frequency Comparison of Responses to Mirrors, Photographs, and Videotapes by Cotton Top Tamarins (Saguinus oedipus).
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Neiworth, Julie J., Anders, Samantha L., and Parsons, Richard R.
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TAMARINS , *ANIMAL aggression - Abstract
Examines the tracking responses related to self-recognition by cotton top tamarins Saguinus oedipus. Description of real-time self-reflection; Identification of the socially aggressive behaviors in barking; Occurrence of mirror-specific character in tamarins.
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- 2001
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194. What Guides a Search for Food That Has Disappeared? Experiments on Cotton-Top Tamarins (Saguinas...
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TAMARINS , *SEARCHING behavior , *PERCEPTION in animals , *ANIMAL feeding behavior , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Explores how tamarins search for objects that have disappeared from view and why they sometimes persevere with strong response biases. Assessment of the cause of tamarins' difficulty with the vertical tubes task; Comparison of the response of tamarins with prior experience on the vertical apparatus and naive tamarins on the horizontal task; Gravity bias of tamarins when searching for food.
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- 2001
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195. Interspecific communication in mixed-species groups of tamarins: evidence from playback experiments.
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Windfelder, Tammy L.
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TAMARINS , *ANIMAL calls - Abstract
Examines the interspecific communication in mixed-species groups of tamarins. Use of long-call vocalization as a communicative signal among tamarin species; Response of the tamarins to the playback of long call vocalization; Absence of external cues.
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- 2001
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196. Food Transfer and Development of Feeding Behavior and Food-Associated Vocalizations in Cotton-Top Tamarins.
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Roush, Rebecca S. and Snowdon, Charles T.
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ANIMAL feeding behavior , *MARMOSET behavior , *TAMARINS , *ANIMAL sounds , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Food transfer between adults and infants is common in many marmoset and tamarin monkeys, and is often accompanied by vocalizations. We hypothesized that vocalizations by adults in a food transfer context creates an opportunity for infants to learn not only what foods are appropriate but what vocalizations are appropriate in feeding contexts. We studied the development of feeding behavior and food-associated vocalizations in 10 infant cotton-top tamarins through the first 20 wks of life. Infants obtained solid food through transfers from older group members, primarily the adult male, beginning at weeks 5–6. Both adults and infants vocalized during food transfers with adults, producing rapid sequences of the call types adults normally give when feeding. Infants were usually successful in obtaining food primarily when the adult was vocalizing. The sooner infants were active participants in food transfers, the sooner they began to feed independently. In the early weeks, infants produced a large number of vocal types during food transfers, but with increasing age there was a steady increase in the number of adult-form food calls and a reduction in other, non-food-associated calls. Infants that fed independently at an early age produced fewer non-food-associated calls by the last month of observation. Infants called at higher rates to their most preferred food. Food transfers accompanied by vocalizations may provide an opportunity for infants to learn about appropriate foods as well as the vocalizations that accompany feeding in adults, and may represent a form of ‘coaching’ or information donation by adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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197. Abstracts of the Twenty-Fourth Annual Meeting of The American Society of Primatologists.
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PRIMATES , *CONSERVATION biology , *COTTONTOP tamarin , *TAMARINS , *HABITATS , *CAPUCHIN monkeys , *LORISES - Abstract
Presents several abstracts related to primates published in the May 2003 issue of the "American Journal of Primatology." "Conservation Education Efforts in Colombia: Cotton-Top Tamarins as Ambassadors for Habitat Preservation," by A. Savage, L. H. Giraldo, C. LaRotta, L. H. Soto and E. F. Garcia; "A Capuchin's (Cebus apella) Performance in Two- and Three-Dimensional Mazes," by S. Cummins-Sebree, D. Fragaszy, J. Johnson-Pynn and E. Hirsh; "Survey of Lorises (Nycticebus pygmaeus and N. coucang) in Ben En National Park, Northern Vietnam," by H. Fitch-Snyder and V. Ngoc Thanh.
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- 2001
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198. Phylogeny of lion tamarins (Leontopithecus spp) based on interphotoreceptor retinol binding protein intron sequences.
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Mundy, Nicholas I. and Kelly, Joanna
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BIOLOGICAL evolution , *LION tamarins , *TAMARINS , *INTERPHOTORECEPTOR retinoid-binding protein , *INTRONS , *ANIMAL genetics , *GOLDEN lion tamarin - Abstract
The evolutionary relationships of the lion tamarins (Leontopithecus ) were investigated using nuclear interphotoreceptor retinol binding protein (IRBP) intron sequences. Phylogenetic reconstructions strongly support the monophyly of the genus, and a sister relationship between the golden lion tamarin, Leontopithecus rosalia , and the black lion tamarin, L. chrysopygus , to the exclusion of the golden-headed lion tamarin, L. chrysomelas . The most parsimonious evolutionary reconstruction suggests that the ancestral lion tamarin and the common ancestor of L. rosalia and L. chrysopygus had predominantly black coats. This reconstruction is not consistent with a theory of orthogenetic evolution of coat color that was based on coat color evolution in marmosets and tamarins. An alternative reconstruction that is consistent with metachromism requires that ancestral lion tamarins had agouti hairs. Am. J. Primatol. 54:33–40, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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199. Subspecific genetic differences in the saddle-back tamarin (Saguinus fuscicollis ) postcranial skeleton.
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Kohn, Luciann P., Langton, Laura Bishoff, and Cheverud, James M.
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TAMARINS , *ANIMAL morphology , *GENETICS , *SAGUINUS , *GENDER , *GENES - Abstract
Saddle-back tamarins (Saguinus fuscicollis ) have been differentiated into subspecies based on coat color and facial morphology. Morphology of first-generation genetic hybrids can provide an understanding of population differences and evolution that may otherwise be difficult to obtain. This study compares postcranial morphology in two hybrids of saddle-back tamarins (S. f. illigeri × S. f. lagonotus and S. f. illigeri × S. f. leucogenys ) to the purebred subspecies. We examine whether postcranial morphology differs between the purebred subspecies and their hybrids, and whether hybrids exhibit heterosis indicative of genetic differences between the parental subspecies. Fifty postcranial dimensions, or traits, were measured on 287 S. fuscicollis skeletons. Measurements were corrected for sex differences and environmental differences (wild-derived or laboratory-born). Females were larger than males for most postcranial dimensions, especially in the pelvis. Significant environmental differences were found throughout the postcranial skeleton, with wild-derived animals generally larger than animals born in the laboratory. Significant heterosis was found for six postcranial traits in the S. f. illigeri × S. f. leucogenys cross, and heterosis was found for 15 postcranial traits in the S. f. illigeri × S. f. lagonotus cross. These results suggest that subspecies differences in skeletal morphology are generally due to genetic rather than environmental differences. The subspecies appear to represent geographic isolates that differ in gene frequencies and directional dominance for skeletal traits. Am. J. Primatol. 54:41–56, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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200. Health evaluation of translocated free-ranging primates in French Guiana.
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de Thoisy, Benoît, Vogel, Ingrun, Reynes, Jean-Marc, Pouliquen, Jean-François, Carme, Bernard, Kazanji, Mirdad, and Vié, Jean-Christophe
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ANIMAL health , *PRIMATES , *HOWLER monkeys , *TAMARINS , *HEMATOLOGY , *SEROLOGY - Abstract
Among over 40 mammal species threatened by the filling of a hydroelectric dam reservoir in French Guiana, three species of primates have been translocated, comprising 124 red howler monkeys, six white-faced sakis, and 95 golden-handed tamarins. Health status of the animals was evaluated by direct physical examination and by hematological, biochemical, virological, and parasitological surveys of collected blood. The physical condition of the howlers was slightly worse toward the end of the capture period, but that of sakis and tamarins remained satisfactory. Several ectoparasites (ticks, larvae of dipterous insects, fleas, and lice) were collected, and various wounds, apparently nondebilitating, were recorded in howlers. Hematological and biochemical profiles determined for the three species revealed a slight anemia in howlers. Entamoeba , Strongyloides , and Trypanoxyurus were common in fecal samples of howlers. A survey of blood smears from the three species revealed infection by several types of microfilaria, Trypanosoma rangeli -like and Plasmodium brasilianum in all three, and Trypanosoma cruzi -like in howlers. These infections had no significant impact on the health status or the hematological profiles. Serologic investigations revealed occasional reactions against Toxoplasma gondii , a strong anti-Plasmodium response in the two Cebidae species, and a weaker one in tamarins. Attempts to isolate arbovirus failed, but antibody responses to Mayaro and yellow fever viruses were strong, especially in the howlers. A strong correlation between age and serological status led to a better understanding of the epidemic cycles. Our survey indicates French Guianan primates are reservoirs for several anthropozoonoses, including malaria, Chagas disease, and arboviruses. Am. J. Primatol. 54:1–16, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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