Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Old World monkeys: three decades of development and change in the study of the Cercopithecoidea
- 2 The molecular systematics of the Cercopithecidae
- 3 Molecular genetic variation and population structure in Papio baboons
- 4 The phylogeny of the Cercopithecoidea
- 5 Ontogeny of the nasal capsule in cercopithecoids: a contribution to the comparative and evolutionary morphology of catarrhines
- 6 Old World monkey origins and diversification: an evolutionary study of diet and dentition
- 7 Geological context of fossil Cercopithecoidea from eastern Africa
- 8 The oro-facial complex in macaques: tongue and jaw movements in feeding
- 9 Evolutionary morphology of the skull in Old World monkeys
- 10 Evolutionary endocrinology of the cercopithecoids
- 11 Behavioral ecology and socioendocrinology of reproductive maturation in cercopithecine monkeys
- 12 Quantitative assessment of occlusal wear and age estimation in Ethiopian and Tanzanian baboons
- 13 Maternal investment throughout the life span in Old World monkeys
- 14 Cognitive capacities of Old World monkeys based on studies of social behavior
- 15 The effects of predation and habitat quality on the socioecology of African monkeys: lessons from the islands of Bioko and Zanzibar
- 16 The loud calls of black-and-white colobus monkeys: their adaptive and taxonomic significance in light of new data
- 17 Agonistic and affiliative relationships in a blue monkey group
- 18 Locomotor behavior in Ugandan monkeys
- 19 The behavioral ecology of Asian colobines
- Index
10 - Evolutionary endocrinology of the cercopithecoids
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Old World monkeys: three decades of development and change in the study of the Cercopithecoidea
- 2 The molecular systematics of the Cercopithecidae
- 3 Molecular genetic variation and population structure in Papio baboons
- 4 The phylogeny of the Cercopithecoidea
- 5 Ontogeny of the nasal capsule in cercopithecoids: a contribution to the comparative and evolutionary morphology of catarrhines
- 6 Old World monkey origins and diversification: an evolutionary study of diet and dentition
- 7 Geological context of fossil Cercopithecoidea from eastern Africa
- 8 The oro-facial complex in macaques: tongue and jaw movements in feeding
- 9 Evolutionary morphology of the skull in Old World monkeys
- 10 Evolutionary endocrinology of the cercopithecoids
- 11 Behavioral ecology and socioendocrinology of reproductive maturation in cercopithecine monkeys
- 12 Quantitative assessment of occlusal wear and age estimation in Ethiopian and Tanzanian baboons
- 13 Maternal investment throughout the life span in Old World monkeys
- 14 Cognitive capacities of Old World monkeys based on studies of social behavior
- 15 The effects of predation and habitat quality on the socioecology of African monkeys: lessons from the islands of Bioko and Zanzibar
- 16 The loud calls of black-and-white colobus monkeys: their adaptive and taxonomic significance in light of new data
- 17 Agonistic and affiliative relationships in a blue monkey group
- 18 Locomotor behavior in Ugandan monkeys
- 19 The behavioral ecology of Asian colobines
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Thirty years ago, three disciplines – ethology, endocrinology, and ecology – undertook the explanation of primate social behavior. Ethological methods have since become universal in primatology, but endocrine and ecological investigations have maintained greater distance. Despite remarkable similarities in the research plans presented in influential papers in behavioral endocrinology (Beach, 1975) and socioecology (Crook et al., 1976) (see Fig. 10.1), differing methods and priorities (see Table 10.1) set these two research areas on divergent trajectories. The experimental methods of early behavioral endocrinology in which hormones were detected and characterized by their action focused attention on the evidence and mechanisms for hormonal influences on individual behavior with less attention to social context and contingencies (Worthman, 1990). Early socioecology, relying on correlations between gross categories of social system and environment, sidestepped the issue of process (Richard, 1981) while focusing attention on the group as the locus of behavioral evolution. Although these different emphases hampered the integration of endocrine and ecological perspectives, the research areas have independently converged as each has broadened its methodologies and perspectives. The causal focus and experimental approaches of behavioral endocrinology have expanded to include a more synergistic framework and observational approach, termed “socioendocrinology,” reflecting an emerging view of the individual as a social organism and new attention to the role of social processes in the regulation of hormone function (Bercovitch and Ziegler, 1990).
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- Old World Monkeys , pp. 269 - 297Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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