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Academic & Professional Books  Ecology  Behavioural Ecology

Movement Ecology of Neotropical Forest Mammals Focus on Social Animals

By: Rafael Reyna-Hurtado(Editor), Colin A Chapman(Editor)
284 pages, 38 colour & 20 b/w illustrations
Publisher: Springer Nature
Movement Ecology of Neotropical Forest Mammals
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  • Movement Ecology of Neotropical Forest Mammals ISBN: 9783030034627 Hardback Jan 2019 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
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About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

Movement Ecology of Neotropical Forest Mammals brings a unique perspective to animal movement studies because all cases came from tropical environments where the great diversity, either biological or structurally (trees, shrubs, vines, epiphytes), presents the animal with several options to fulfill its live requirements. These conditions have forced the evolution of unique movement patterns and ecological strategies. Movement is an essential process in the life of all organisms. Animals move because they are hungry, thirsty, to avoid being eaten, or because they want to find mates. Understanding the causes and consequences of animal movement is not an easy task for behavioural ecologists. Many animals are shy, move in secretive ways and are very sensible to human presence, therefore, studying the movements of mammals in tropical environments present logistical and methodological challenges that have recently started to be solved by ecologist around the world. In Movement Ecology of Neotropical Forest Mammals the editors are compiling a set of extraordinary cases where researchers have used some of the modern technology and the strongest methodological approaches to understand movement patterns in wild tropical mammals.

Contents

Foreword
1. Why Movement Ecology Matters
2. The Impact of Hurricane Otto on Baird's Tapir Movement in Nicaragua's Indio Maiz Biological Reserve
3. White-lipped peccary home-range size in the Maya Forest of Guatemala and Mexico
4. White-lipped peccary movement and range in agricultural lands of Central Brazil
5. Movements of White-Lipped Peccary in French Guiana
6. Spatial ecology of a large and endangered tropical mammal: the White-lipped Peccary in Darien, Panama
7. Movements of Neotropical Forest Deer, what do we know?
8. Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico
9. Terrestrial locomotion and other adaptive behaviors in howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra) living in forest fragments
10. Variation in space use and social cohesion within and between four groups of woolly monkeys (Lagothrix lagotricha poeppigii) in relation to fruit availability and mating opportunities at the Tiputini Biodiversity Station, Ecuador
11. Home Range and Daily Traveled Distances of Highland Colombian Woolly Monkeys (Lagothrix lagothricha lugens): Comparing Spatial Data from GPS-collars and Direct Follows
12. Ranging responses to fruit and arthropod availability by a tufted capuchin group (Sapajus apella) in the Colombian Amazon
13. Insights of the movements of the jaguar in the tropical forests of southern Mexico
14. Movements and home range of Jaguars (Panthera onca) and Mountain lions (Puma concolor) in a tropical dry forest of Western Mexico
15. Next moves: The future of Neotropical mammals movement ecology

Customer Reviews

Biography

Rafael Reyna-Hurtado is a Mexican biologist that has studied tropical ungulates since 1997 in Mesoamerica and Uganda. Rafael obtained a Master degree and PhD degree in Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in University of Florida. He also conducted a three years postdoctoral study in McGill University, Montreal, Canada with focus in Africa terrestrial mammals. Rafael has published more than 60 articles among scientific papers, book chapters and public contributions. Rafael has focused on the study of the movement ecology of a social species, the white-lipped peccary in the Calakmul forest of Mexico. Rafael is a professor of El Colegio de la Frontera Sur in Campeche city, Southern Mexico where he has formed a team of highly qualified students that are conducting studies in movement patterns of tropical ungulates in all Mesoamerica.

Colin A. Chapman is a professor of Department of Anthropology of McGill University who has published more than 400 scientific papers and has extensively studied primates socio-ecological relationship. Colin has experiences in Costa Rica, Mexico but has focused the last 29 years to studied primates communities of Kibale National Park in Uganda in one of the longest studies in primates ever conducted.

By: Rafael Reyna-Hurtado(Editor), Colin A Chapman(Editor)
284 pages, 38 colour & 20 b/w illustrations
Publisher: Springer Nature
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