129 results match your criteria: "Lester E. Fisher Center[Affiliation]"

Strontium isotope (Sr/Sr) analysis with reference to strontium isotope landscapes (Sr isoscapes) allows reconstructing mobility and migration in archaeology, ecology, and forensics. However, despite the vast potential of research involving Sr/Sr analysis particularly in Africa, Sr isoscapes remain unavailable for the largest parts of the continent. Here, we measure the Sr/Sr ratios in 778 environmental samples from 24 African countries and combine this data with published data to model a bioavailable Sr isoscape for sub-Saharan Africa using random forest regression.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Great ape surveys and the implications of long-term monitoring in the Djéké Triangle, Republic of Congo.

Primates

November 2024

Wildlife Conservation Society, Congo Program, B.P. 14537, Brazzaville, Republic of Congo.

Existing protected areas are anchors for conservation. Safeguarding flora and fauna within their peripheral areas is essential to maintaining their integrity and to potential increases to the area under effective conservation. With the decline in tropical forests, initiatives to increase the area of undisturbed forests under strict protection, particularly those neighboring protected areas, is of critical importance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Local genetic adaptation to habitat in wild chimpanzees.

bioRxiv

July 2024

UCL Genetics Institute, Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London, United Kingdom.

Article Synopsis
  • Scientists study how animals change to survive in different places, which is really important for understanding biology.
  • They looked at chimpanzees, our closest relatives, who live in many types of environments like rainforests and savannahs.
  • By examining genetic information from wild chimpanzees, they discovered that some chimps have adapted to fight off malaria in similar ways to humans, showing how important genetic diversity is for endangered animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Animals navigate complex environments that present both hazards and essential resources. The prioritization of perceptual information that is relevant to their next actions, such as accessing or avoiding different resources, poses a potential challenge to animals, one that can impact survival. While animals' attentional biases toward negatively valanced and threatening stimuli have been explored, parallel biases toward differently valued resources remain understudied.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Humans and other primates harbour complex gut bacterial communities that influence health and disease, but the evolutionary histories of these symbioses remain unclear. This is partly due to limited information about the microbiota of ancestral primates. Here, using phylogenetic analyses of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), we show that hundreds of gut bacterial clades diversified in parallel (that is, co-diversified) with primate species over millions of years, but that humans have experienced widespread losses of these ancestral symbionts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum causes substantial human mortality, primarily in equatorial Africa. Enriched in affected African populations, the B*53 variant of HLA-B, a cell surface protein that presents peptide antigens to cytotoxic lymphocytes, confers protection against severe malaria. Gorilla, chimpanzee, and bonobo are humans' closest living relatives.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A survey collected data on 1122 chimpanzees from various facilities, focusing on their age, sex, social dynamics, and behaviors observed over two years.
  • Tool-use was observed in 94.3% of the chimps, while social grooming, copulation, and nest-building were reported in 85.7%, 68.3%, and 58.9%, respectively, with 45.6% engaging in all four species-typical behaviors.
  • Logistic regression analysis revealed that factors like rearing history, group size, and facility type significantly influenced behaviors such as copulation, tool use, nest-building, and social grooming among chimpanzees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Female squirrel monkeys' () responses to inequity in a group context; testing a link between cooperation and inequity responses.

Anim Behav

November 2022

Department of Comparative Medicine, Michale E. Keeling Center for Comparative Medicine and Research, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Bastrop, TX, U.S.A.

Primates of several species respond negatively to receiving less preferred rewards than a partner for completing the same task (inequity responses), either rejecting rewards or refusing to participate in the task when disadvantaged. This has been linked to cooperation, with species that cooperate frequently refusing to participate in inequity tasks (the 'cooperation hypothesis'). However, inequity is a social response, and previous research has involved dyads, precluding studying the effects of additional social partners.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The importance of thinking about the future in culture and cumulative cultural evolution.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

December 2022

Department of Psychology, Language Research Center, Neuroscience Institute and Center for Behavioral Neuroscience, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302-5010, USA.

Thinking about possibilities plays a critical role in the choices humans make throughout their lives. Despite this, the influence of individuals' ability to consider what is possible on culture has been largely overlooked. We propose that the ability to reason about future possibilities or prospective cognition, has consequences for cultural change, possibly facilitating the process of cumulative cultural evolution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Earth's environments harbor complex consortia of microbes that affect processes ranging from host health to biogeochemical cycles. Understanding their evolution and function is limited by an inability to isolate genomes in a high-throughput manner. Here, we present a workflow for bacterial whole-genome sequencing using open-source labware and the OpenTrons robotics platform, reducing costs to approximately $10 per genome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chimpanzees organize their social relationships like humans.

Sci Rep

October 2022

Grupo Interdisciplinar de Sistemas Complejos (GISC), Departamento de Matemáticas, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, 28911, Leganés, Spain.

Human relationships are structured in a set of layers, ordered from higher (intimate relationships) to lower (acquaintances) emotional and cognitive intensity. This structure arises from the limits of our cognitive capacity and the different amounts of resources required by different relationships. However, it is unknown whether nonhuman primate species organize their affiliative relationships following the same pattern.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Chimpanzees host various malaria parasites, including some closely related to the dangerous P. falciparum, and this study analyzes the ecology and spread of these infections in wild populations.
  • Researchers used molecular techniques to analyze fecal samples and discovered that malaria infections in chimpanzees start early in life and exhibit seasonal prevalence, with the likelihood of infection peaking at around 24.5°C.
  • The study also found that malaria prevalence is influenced by ambient temperature and forest cover, emphasizing the role of forest-dwelling mosquito vectors and mapping areas in equatorial Africa that indicate potential risks for human malaria exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding causes of death allows adjustment of health management strategies for animals in managed care. From 224 documented chimpanzee deaths occurring from 1995 to 2019 in 42 accredited U.S.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study provides the first comprehensive catalog of chimpanzee genetic diversity using non-invasive samples collected from 48 sites in Africa, focusing on chromosome 21.
  • The research reveals clear genetic differences among the four recognized chimpanzee subspecies and indicates unexpected local genetic exchanges, while also mapping patterns of population isolation, migration, and connectivity.
  • Unlike humans, chimpanzees lack a history of long-distance migrations, which may affect their cultural transmission, and the study introduces a precise geolocation method for identifying the origins of confiscated chimpanzees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In zoos, primates experience markedly different interactions with familiar humans, such as the zookeepers who care for them, compared with those with unfamiliar humans, such as the large volume of zoo visitors to whom they are regularly exposed. While the behaviour of zoo-housed primates in the presence of unfamiliar, and to a lesser extent familiar, humans has received considerable attention, if and how they spontaneously distinguish familiar from unfamiliar people, and the cognitive mechanisms underlying the relationships they form with familiar and unfamiliar humans, remain poorly understood. Using a dot-probe paradigm, we assessed whether primates (chimpanzees and gorillas) show an attentional bias toward the faces of familiar humans, with whom the apes presumably had a positive relationship.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Zoonotic origin of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium malariae from African apes.

Nat Commun

April 2022

Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3FL, UK.

The human parasite Plasmodium malariae has relatives infecting African apes (Plasmodium rodhaini) and New World monkeys (Plasmodium brasilianum), but its origins remain unknown. Using a novel approach to characterise P. malariae-related sequences in wild and captive African apes, we found that this group comprises three distinct lineages, one of which represents a previously unknown, highly divergent species infecting chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas across central Africa.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Younger generations are more interested than older generations in having non-domesticated animals as pets.

PLoS One

February 2022

Animals, Science and Environment, Disney's Animal Kingdom®, Lake Buena Vista, Florida, United States of America.

The trade and private ownership of non-domesticated animals has detrimental effects on individual animals and their wild populations. Therefore, there is a need to understand the conditions that motivate and dissuade interest in non-domesticated pet ownership. Past research has demonstrated that the way in which non-domesticated animals are portrayed in images influences the public's perception that they are suitable as pets.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Collective knowledge and the dynamics of culture in chimpanzees.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

January 2022

Centre for Social Learning and Cognitive Evolution, and Scottish Primate Research Group, School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, South Street, St Andrews KY16 9JP, UK.

Article Synopsis
  • - Recent research highlights the importance of social learning in chimpanzees, showing that individuals within communities can combine different discoveries to create shared innovations in tool use.
  • - Experiments indicate that chimpanzees can change their tool use habits based on the majority's behavior, suggesting a consensus-driven decision-making process.
  • - The study also identifies that social tolerance among groups impacts the effectiveness of complex tool use, hinting at a link between social dynamics and cultural development in chimpanzees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is important to those managing Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) in captive settings to understand predictors of wounding. While studies have demonstrated that season (breeding or nonbreeding) and sex predict rates of wounding received by zoo-housed Japanese macaques, we investigated whether individual differences in personality ratings also might explain some of the observed interindividual variance in wounding. Such patterns were previously observed in rhesus macaques (M.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Among the growing list of novel tools with which to assess animal welfare is the use of thermal (infrared) imaging. The technology has already been utilized to identify emotional arousal in several nonhuman primate species, though most of these approaches have necessitated the use of relatively controlled settings. Here, we were interested to determine the feasibility of such techniques in a sanctuary setting in which chimpanzees were unrestrained and able to move freely around their enclosures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Detailed, long-term datasets on the life histories of long-lived species such as great apes are necessary to understand their survival patterns but are relatively rare. Such information requires prolonged and consistent record-keeping over many generations, so for chimpanzees (), this equates to many decades of input. As life history variables can be altered by differences in environmental influences (whether natural or artificial), there is substantial value to being able to compare across populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Paleoclimate reconstructions have enhanced our understanding of how past climates have shaped present-day biodiversity. We hypothesize that the geographic extent of Pleistocene forest refugia and suitable habitat fluctuated significantly in time during the late Quaternary for chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Using bioclimatic variables representing monthly temperature and precipitation estimates, past human population density data, and an extensive database of georeferenced presence points, we built a model of changing habitat suitability for chimpanzees at fine spatio-temporal scales dating back to the Last Interglacial (120,000 BP).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding variation in host-associated microbial communities is important given the relevance of microbiomes to host physiology and health. Using 560 fecal samples collected from wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) across their range, we assessed how geography, genetics, climate, vegetation, and diet relate to gut microbial community structure (prokaryotes, eukaryotic parasites) at multiple spatial scales. We observed a high degree of regional specificity in the microbiome composition, which was associated with host genetics, available plant foods, and potentially with cultural differences in tool use, which affect diet.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To sustain life, humans and other terrestrial animals must maintain a tight balance of water gain and water loss each day. However, the evolution of human water balance physiology is poorly understood due to the absence of comparative measures from other hominoids. While humans drink daily to maintain water balance, rainforest-living great apes typically obtain adequate water from their food and can go days or weeks without drinking.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF