Search results for "Macaca sylvanus"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Macaque remains from the early Pliocene of the Iberian Peninsula

2018

Macaques dispersed out of Africa into Eurasia in the framework of a broader intercontinental faunal exchange that coincided in time with the sea level drop associated with the Messinian Salinity Crisis. They are first recorded in Europe (Italy and Spain) by the latest Miocene, being subsequently recorded all over Europe, albeit sparsely, throughout the Pliocene and Pleistocene. These fossil European macaques are attributed to several (sub)species of the extant Barbary macaque (Macaca sylvanus). In Iberia, fossil macaques are best documented by Macaca sylvanus florentina from various Early Pleistocene sites, whereas their published Pliocene record is very scarce. Here we report the oldest po…

MaleCuspid010506 paleontologyEarly PleistocenePleistoceneZoologySubspecies01 natural sciencesMacaqueTheropithecusstomatognathic systemMessinianPeninsulabiology.animalAnimals0601 history and archaeologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeography060101 anthropologygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyFossilsMacaca sylvanus06 humanities and the artsbiology.organism_classificationMolarPuerto de la CadenaSpainTurolianAnthropologyMesopithecusMurciaMacacaJournal of Human Evolution
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Fossil remains of Macaca sylvanus florentina (Cocchi, 1872) (Primates, Cercopithecidae) from the Early Pleistocene of Quibas (Murcia, Spain)

2011

The macaque material from the Early Pleistocene site of Quibas (Albanilla, Murcia, Spain), including dentognathic remains, isolated teeth and some postcranial bone fragments, is described. Both metrically and morphologically, this sample must be attributed to Macaca sylvanus (the Barbary macaque). This species is currently distributed through North Africa and Gibraltar, but was much more widely distributed during the Plio-Pleistocene, being represented by several European fossil subspecies. Metrical comparisons of dental size and proportions between extant M. s. sylvanus and fossil Macaca sylvanus florentina from the type locality and other Italian sites are undertaken, in order to classify…

Early PleistocenebiologyFossilsSkullMacaca sylvanusPostcraniaZoologyPlio-PleistoceneSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationPaleontologyTaxonGeographystomatognathic systemEutheriaSpainAnthropologyAnimalsMacacaType localityToothEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Human Evolution
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New food provision strategy for a colony of Barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus): effects on social hierarchy?

2017

biologyMacaca sylvanusSocial hierarchyZoologybiology.organism_classificationPsychologyIntegrative Food, Nutrition and Metabolism
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Data from: Mechanisms of reciprocity and diversity in social networks: a modelling and comparative approach

2018

Three mechanisms have been proposed to underlie reciprocation of social behaviors in gregarious animals: ‘calculated reciprocity’, ‘emotional bookkeeping’ and ‘symmetry-based reciprocity’. Among these explanations, emotional book-keeping has received the broadest support from experimental and observational studies. On the other hand, three individual-based models have shown that reciprocation may emerge via ‘symmetry-based reciprocity’, ‘emotional bookkeeping’, or a combination of both mechanisms. Here we use these three models to assess their relative fit with empirical data on reciprocation and social network structure across different groups and species of macaques. We collected grooming…

medicine and health careMacaca fascicularisMacaca radiatamacaquesMacaca tonkeanaMacaca sylvanusMacaca arctoidesMacaca assamensisLife SciencesMedicineMacaca mulattaMacaca fuscata
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