Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 African primate communities: Determinants of structure and threats to survival
- 2 Biomass and use of resources in south and south-east Asian primate communities
- 3 Species coexistence, distribution, and environmental determinants of neotropical primate richness: A community-level zoogeographic analysis
- 4 Primate communities: Madagascar
- 5 Primate diversity
- 6 Phylogenetic and temporal perspectives on primate ecology
- 7 Population density of primates in communities: Differences in community structure
- 8 Body mass, competition and the structure of primate communities
- 9 Convergence and divergence in primate social systems
- 10 Of mice and monkeys: Primates as predictors of mammal community richness
- 11 Comparing communities
- 12 Large-scale patterns of species richness and species range size in anthropoid primates
- 13 The recent evolutionary past of primate communities: Likely environmental impacts during the past three millennia
- 14 Resources and primate community structure
- 15 Effects of subsistence hunting and forest types on the structure of Amazonian primate communities
- 16 Spatial and temporal scales in primate community structure
- 17 Primate communities in Africa: The consequences of long-term evolution or the artifact of recent hunting?
- 18 The future of primate communities: A reflection of the present?
- 19 Concluding remarks
- Systematic index
- Subject index
10 - Of mice and monkeys: Primates as predictors of mammal community richness
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 African primate communities: Determinants of structure and threats to survival
- 2 Biomass and use of resources in south and south-east Asian primate communities
- 3 Species coexistence, distribution, and environmental determinants of neotropical primate richness: A community-level zoogeographic analysis
- 4 Primate communities: Madagascar
- 5 Primate diversity
- 6 Phylogenetic and temporal perspectives on primate ecology
- 7 Population density of primates in communities: Differences in community structure
- 8 Body mass, competition and the structure of primate communities
- 9 Convergence and divergence in primate social systems
- 10 Of mice and monkeys: Primates as predictors of mammal community richness
- 11 Comparing communities
- 12 Large-scale patterns of species richness and species range size in anthropoid primates
- 13 The recent evolutionary past of primate communities: Likely environmental impacts during the past three millennia
- 14 Resources and primate community structure
- 15 Effects of subsistence hunting and forest types on the structure of Amazonian primate communities
- 16 Spatial and temporal scales in primate community structure
- 17 Primate communities in Africa: The consequences of long-term evolution or the artifact of recent hunting?
- 18 The future of primate communities: A reflection of the present?
- 19 Concluding remarks
- Systematic index
- Subject index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Understanding the patterns of community structure is one of the eternal, basic goals of ecology, while measuring and monitoring diversity is a necessity for conservation biology. The fundamental data set for both of these is the simple species list. Every chapter in this book is directly or indirectly based on site-specific primate lists. Complete primate lists for localities number in dozens for every major biogeographic region, but despite the obvious ecological importance of mammals, the complete composition of few, if any, tropical forest mammal faunas is known. This knowledge vacuum is a consequence not only of the intrinsic difficulty of sampling species which cannot be seen and are not readily captured, but also of large temporal fluctuations in small mammal densities that result in rare species often being undetectable except during periods of peak population. Of all forest mammals, primates are the most easily identified and most quickly inventoried and monitored. In this chapter I explore the question of how primate species richness relates to the species richness of mammals in other taxa at given localities; how these patterns vary among different continents; on what scale patterns occur; and whether primates are good indicators of mammalian species richness. I conclude with comments on the possible underlying causes of some of the patterns discovered.
RATIONALE
Mammal species are difficult to inventory, but some (animals not captured by standard methods, such as shrews, small insectivorous marsupials, high-flying bats, etc.) are much more difficult than others. For this reason, ‘complete’ inventories of the most difficult habitat, tropical rainforest, may not exist. Of all mammals, primates are the most easily inventoried, being diurnal, large, conspicuous, and noisy.
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- Primate Communities , pp. 171 - 188Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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