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Introduction: From Diets to Disturbance: The Evolution of Primate Feeding Studies
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David J. Chivers
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Preface xv
- Introduction: From Diets to Disturbance: The Evolution of Primate Feeding Studies 1
-
PART I Finding, Building, and Using a Diet
- 1 The Role of Macro-and Micronutrients in Primate Food Choice 19
- 2 What Extant Primates Eat: A Global Survey 35
- 3 The First Diet: Mother’s Milk 52
- 4 Diet and the Energetics of Reproduction 68
- 5 Primate Energy Requirements: Brains, Babies, or Behavior? 82
- 6 Primate Senses: Finding and Evaluating Food 95
- 7 Seasonality in Food Availability and Energy Intake 114
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PART II Nutrients, Nutrition, and Food Processing
- 8 Enzymes and Microbes of the Mammalian Gut: Toward an Integrated Understanding of Digestion 135
- 9 Secondary Compounds in Primate Foods: Time for New Approaches 150
- 10 Hormonally Active Phytochemicals in Primate Diets: Prevalence across the Order 176
- 11 Nutrition and Immune Function in Primates 198
- 12 Nutrition and Primate Life History 222
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PART III Food Acquisition and Nutrition in Social Environments
- 13 Social Food Competition, Then and Now 241
- 14 Applying a Framework of Social Nutrition to Primate Behavioral Ecology 261
- 15 Primate Cognitive Ecology Challenges and Solutions to Locating and Acquiring Resources in Social Foragers 272
- 17 Hunting by Primates 327
- 18 Movement Ecology and Feeding Neighborhoods 355
- 19 Foraging in a Landscape of Fear 364
- 21 Behavioral Flexibility and Diet 381
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PART IV Methods, Practice, and Application
- 21 Measuring Food in the Field 397
- 22 Wild Plant Food Chemistry 417
- 23 Evaluating Primate Diets with Stable Isotopes 431
- 24 Mechanical Properties of Primate Foods 446
- 25 Modeling Primate Nutrition 463
- 26 Reconstructing Fossil Primate Diets: Dental-Dietary Adaptations and Foodprints for Thought 498
- 27 Food and Primate Carrying Capacity 515
- 28 Climate Change and Primate Nutritional Ecology 532
- 29 Primate Foraging Strategies Modulate Responses to Anthropogenic Change and Thus Primate Conservation 544
- Afterword 555
- Acknowledgments 557
- Literature Cited 559
- List of Contributors 715
- Index 723
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Preface xv
- Introduction: From Diets to Disturbance: The Evolution of Primate Feeding Studies 1
-
PART I Finding, Building, and Using a Diet
- 1 The Role of Macro-and Micronutrients in Primate Food Choice 19
- 2 What Extant Primates Eat: A Global Survey 35
- 3 The First Diet: Mother’s Milk 52
- 4 Diet and the Energetics of Reproduction 68
- 5 Primate Energy Requirements: Brains, Babies, or Behavior? 82
- 6 Primate Senses: Finding and Evaluating Food 95
- 7 Seasonality in Food Availability and Energy Intake 114
-
PART II Nutrients, Nutrition, and Food Processing
- 8 Enzymes and Microbes of the Mammalian Gut: Toward an Integrated Understanding of Digestion 135
- 9 Secondary Compounds in Primate Foods: Time for New Approaches 150
- 10 Hormonally Active Phytochemicals in Primate Diets: Prevalence across the Order 176
- 11 Nutrition and Immune Function in Primates 198
- 12 Nutrition and Primate Life History 222
-
PART III Food Acquisition and Nutrition in Social Environments
- 13 Social Food Competition, Then and Now 241
- 14 Applying a Framework of Social Nutrition to Primate Behavioral Ecology 261
- 15 Primate Cognitive Ecology Challenges and Solutions to Locating and Acquiring Resources in Social Foragers 272
- 17 Hunting by Primates 327
- 18 Movement Ecology and Feeding Neighborhoods 355
- 19 Foraging in a Landscape of Fear 364
- 21 Behavioral Flexibility and Diet 381
-
PART IV Methods, Practice, and Application
- 21 Measuring Food in the Field 397
- 22 Wild Plant Food Chemistry 417
- 23 Evaluating Primate Diets with Stable Isotopes 431
- 24 Mechanical Properties of Primate Foods 446
- 25 Modeling Primate Nutrition 463
- 26 Reconstructing Fossil Primate Diets: Dental-Dietary Adaptations and Foodprints for Thought 498
- 27 Food and Primate Carrying Capacity 515
- 28 Climate Change and Primate Nutritional Ecology 532
- 29 Primate Foraging Strategies Modulate Responses to Anthropogenic Change and Thus Primate Conservation 544
- Afterword 555
- Acknowledgments 557
- Literature Cited 559
- List of Contributors 715
- Index 723