Book contents
- Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology 61
- Series page
- The Monkeys of Stormy Mountain
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I Historical perspectives
- Part II Sexual behaviour
- Part III Cultural behaviour, social interactions and ecology
- 13 Thirty years of stone handling tradition in Arashiyama-Kyoto macaques: implications for cumulative culture and tool use in non-human primates
- 14 Socialobject play among juvenile Japanese macaques: Comparison between the provisioned Arashiyama-Kyoto troop and the non-provisioned Kinkazan troop
- 14 Box essay 1 Play fighting in Japanese macaques: A comparative perspective
- 14 Box essay 2 Eye-covering play in Japanese macaques and orangutans
- 15 Behavioural sequences involved in grooming interactions in adult female Japanese macaques: How do participants change roles and maintain interactions?
- 15 Box essay Dental flossing behaviour as a grooming-related innovation by a Japanese macaque
- 16 Theimpact of kinship, defence cost and priority of access on food competition
- 17 Plant-food diet of the Arashiyama-Kyoto Japanese macaques and its potential medicinal value
- Part IV Management and education
- Appendix: Bibliography of publications on the Arashiyama macaques
- Index
14 - Socialobject play among juvenile Japanese macaques: Comparison between the provisioned Arashiyama-Kyoto troop and the non-provisioned Kinkazan troop
from Part III - Cultural behaviour, social interactions and ecology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology 61
- Series page
- The Monkeys of Stormy Mountain
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I Historical perspectives
- Part II Sexual behaviour
- Part III Cultural behaviour, social interactions and ecology
- 13 Thirty years of stone handling tradition in Arashiyama-Kyoto macaques: implications for cumulative culture and tool use in non-human primates
- 14 Socialobject play among juvenile Japanese macaques: Comparison between the provisioned Arashiyama-Kyoto troop and the non-provisioned Kinkazan troop
- 14 Box essay 1 Play fighting in Japanese macaques: A comparative perspective
- 14 Box essay 2 Eye-covering play in Japanese macaques and orangutans
- 15 Behavioural sequences involved in grooming interactions in adult female Japanese macaques: How do participants change roles and maintain interactions?
- 15 Box essay Dental flossing behaviour as a grooming-related innovation by a Japanese macaque
- 16 Theimpact of kinship, defence cost and priority of access on food competition
- 17 Plant-food diet of the Arashiyama-Kyoto Japanese macaques and its potential medicinal value
- Part IV Management and education
- Appendix: Bibliography of publications on the Arashiyama macaques
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Monkeys of Stormy Mountain60 Years of Primatological Research on the Japanese Macaques of Arashiyama, pp. 258 - 282Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012
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