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Foraging responses to nutritional pressures in two species of Cercopithecines Macaca mulatta and Papio ursinus /Clymer, Gretchen A. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2006. / Title from title screen. Frank L'Engle Williams, committee chair; Aras Petrulis, Susan McCombie, committee members. Electronic text (69 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed Apr. 26, 2007. Includes bibliographical references (p. 58-67).
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Developing a methodology for cognitive research with socially-housed chacma baboons.McFall, Andrew. January 2004 (has links)
Testing on laboratory-housed primates has long been the standard for research in cognitive
psychology and other areas. As an alternative to this, a group of socially housed chacma
baboons (Papio hamadrayas ursinus) at the Centre for Animal Rehabilitation and Education
near Phalaborwa in Limpopo Province, South Africa, were the subjects for a set of basic
cognitive tests. The purpose of the tests was to explore the importance of analogical reasoning
by means of testing perceptual and conceptual skills in baboons. The main aim of this
research is to investigate the degree to which captive but socially housed baboons are useful
as experimental subjects, and to develop an apparatus and protocol to perform these tests in
situ in the baboons' home cages. Five baboons were chosen as the subjects for
experimentation. All subjects completed three groups of tasks to a criterion of at least 80%
success over four successive experiments. The tasks tested baboons' discrimination ability
between two coloured tiles, a reversal of that same discrimination task, and a simple match to-
sample task. As a result of time constraints, further tasks testing conceptual ability had to
be abandoned. A record was kept of environmental and social factors that may have
influenced the motivation of the subjects. The time taken to complete each experiment
correlated in many cases with the number of distractions experienced by the subjects. There
appeared to be no significant correlation between the score attained by a subject and the
number of distractions experienced by that subject. The greater number of distractions
experienced by the subjects was a result of the more engaged social world in which these
baboons exist. Consequently, their motivation to perform repetitive cognitive tests was
decreased, and needed to be countered in novel ways. An apparatus and a protocol for testing
under these conditions were developed. Testing baboons' cognitive skills in these
circumstances is both possible and desirable for ethical reasons, though the process takes
longer than under laboratory conditions. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2004
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Resource utilisation of the Chacma baboon in different vegetation types in North-Eastern Mountain Sour Veld, Blyde Canyon Nature ReserveMarais, A. J. (Albertus Johannes) 31 May 2005 (has links)
The Blyde Canyon Nature reserve displays its natural beauty for most National and International visitors all over the World.
The region is renowned for its high rainfall and misty weather, which enhances the natural beauty of the area.
Because of the mist belt effect, the area is one of the largest commercial forestry areas in South Africa. Baboons also seek after the topography and vegetation type (Northeastern mountain sourveld) that is typical of this area and numerous baboon troops occur in this region. This combination is often the cause of conflict between baboons and humans.
The need arise for these baboons to be studied and managed as a component of this very important ecosystem.
The main aims of the study were firstly to identify a natural ranging baboon troop, to habituate them and gather data regarding home range sizes, troop sizes, densities and seasonal food selection and secondly to give a detailed habitat description and vegetation map of the troop's home range.
The baboon activity data was collected in 15-minute intervals over a one year period on a troop at Bourke's Luck. This included all activities such as walking, social, foraging, and resting. The food parts selected as well as the species foraged on was identified. Numerous statistical methods were used on the baboon data such as; the Shapiro Wilk test, Spearman rank-order correlation, ANOVA, and the Kolmogarov-Smirnov two sample test.
There was a positive correlation between home range areas and troop sizes and the baboons preferred certain habitats above others during different seasons.
To give a detailed habitat description of the troop's home range, 50 sample plots was stratified-randomly distributed in order to include all the different stratification units. a TWINSPAN classification, refined by Braun-Blanquet procedures was carried out on the Bourke's Luck section that included the baboons home range. 13 Plant communities, which can be grouped into 7 major community types were identified.
This study resulted in the ecological interpretation of baboon activities related to the ecological interpretation of the vegetation in the baboon troop's home range. / Agriculture, Animal Health and Human Ecology / M.Tech. (Nature Conservation)
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Molecular characterisation of glycine-N-acyltransferase from two primates : the vervet monkey and the chacma baboon / Cornelius Mthiuzimele MahlanzaMahlanza, Mthiuzimele Cornelius January 2011 (has links)
Glycine-N-acyltransferase (GLYAT, EC 2.3.1.13) has been characterised in a number of species including: humans, chimpanzees, rhesus monkeys and bovines. The characterisation of GLYAT from various species contributes to a better understanding of the diversity of the enzyme which in turn might help improve the current understanding of detoxification in mammals. The GLYAT enzyme of both the chacma baboon and vervet monkey has not been characterised. In this project, tissue samples were obtained from a chacma baboon (Papio ursinus) and a vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) to determine the nucleic acid sequence that encodes GLYAT in these two species to broaden our current understanding on the diversity of GLYAT in primates.
A liver of a chacma baboon was used to extract total RNA. Complementary DNA (cDNA) was synthesised using an oligo (dT) primer. An open reading frame (ORF) encoding GLYAT of the chacma baboon was amplified with a PCR (polymerase chain reaction) using primers designed from a human GLYAT transcript. The PCR product containing an ORF encoding GLYAT of the chacma baboon was cloned, sequenced and expressed. The recombinant GLYAT of the chacma baboon expressed well in bacteria, but was insoluble and did not have enzyme activity. A crude cytoplasmic extract was prepared from the liver of a chacma baboon. The objective was to compare enzyme activity between the native and recombinant GLYAT. The prepared liver extract from the chacma baboon was assayed for enzyme activity and compared to the activity in a liver extract from bovine, previously prepared by Ms M Snyders. Both the chacma baboon and bovine liver extracts had GLYAT enzyme activity.
To obtain sequence information on vervet monkey GLYAT, leukocytes were isolated from blood obtained from a living vervet monkey. A human GLYAT gene sequence was used as a reference DNA sequence in the design of PCR primers that were used to amplify the exons of GLYAT of the vervet monkey. All six GLYAT exons were individually amplified and PCR products were sequenced. The sequences were combined to reconstruct an ORF encoding GLYAT of the vervet monkey.
The ORFs coding the GLYAT of both chacma baboon and vervet monkey were found to be 888 bp long (excluding stop codon) and encoded a protein of 296 amino acids. A fragment of 1256 bp of the chacma baboon GLYAT transcript was sequenced. The two GLYAT ORF sequences were translated to amino acid sequences and aligned to that of GLYAT of primates obtained from the Ensembl sequence database. The GLYAT amino acid sequences of the chacma baboon, vervet monkey and rhesus monkey formed a related group, distinct from other primates. The chacma baboon and vervet monkey sequences were 99 % identical to the rhesus monkey sequence and 92.6 % identical to the human sequence. There were 4 new variations introduced by GLYAT amino acid sequences from the chacma baboon and the vervet monkey. The vervet monkey introduced an isoleucine in place of a valine at position 32 and an arginine in place of a histidine or glutamine at position 224. The chacma baboon introduced a tyrosine in place of isoleucine at position 201 and an arginine in place of histidine or glutamine at position 240.
The knowledge generated in this project will broaden the understanding of GLYAT diversity relating to GLYAT in primates. / Thesis (M.Sc. (Biochemistry))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2011
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The dynamics of social relationships among female Chacma baboons (Papio cynocephalus ursinus) in Zululand.Ron, Tamar. January 1993 (has links)
The focus of this study is the effect of environmental
conditions on the social relationships among females in a
free-ranging troop of chacma baboons (Papio cynocephalus
ursinus), in a southern woodland habitat. The female
dominance hierarchy, rank related differential costs and
benefits to individuals, and the nature of special
relationships between females, were followed. The study was
conducted for a total of 18 months during three years, at
Mkuzi Game Reserve, Zululand, South-Africa. The study troop
occupy a rich woodland habitat with abundant food
resources. Visibility under these conditions is poor and
the baboons are subjected to leopard predation. Intra-troop
competition for food among female primates and its effect
on lifetime reproductive success, has been widely stressed
to be a major cost for low ranking females. No evidence of
competition for food was found among females at Mkuzi. It
is suggested that the main cause for mortality may be
predation by leopards, and that females compete mainly over
a safe spatial position. The following characteristics of
female sociality at Mkuzi may support this suggestion:
1. While no indication of rank related feeding
behaviour, reproductive success, or 'attractiveness' to
others was found, the higher ranking females had more
access to central, and thus better protected, spatial positions in the troop.
2. The importance of social associations among females
at Mkuzi seems to lie in mutual grooming and protection
from predation by the vicinity to each other, and not in
coalitionary support. Female associates were thus not
necessarily adjacent ranking and probably not kin.
3. Although female dominance hierarchy was usually
stable, the lowest ranking adult female has promoted her
rank independently, following the disappearance of her only
female associate and during her pregnancy, when she was
probably subjected to high risk of predation.
4. Following troop fission, most females chose to
improve their own rank position by adopting the AYS
strategy (Abandon Your immediate Superior in rank), rather
than joining associates. It is suggested that the resident
males were responsible for the initiation of troop fission,
in order to decrease the high cost of sexual competition to
them, by reducing the number of males in each daughter
troop. High intensity of competition between males was the
result of the high female reproductive success. Risk of
predation, and therefore the cost to individual females,
increased after fission.
This study may present an additional
accumulating
behavioural
evidence on
adaptations
environmental conditions.
the
of
flexibility
primates
example to
of social and
to various environmental conditions. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1993.
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Molecular characterisation of glycine-N-acyltransferase from two primates : the vervet monkey and the chacma baboon / Cornelius Mthiuzimele MahlanzaMahlanza, Mthiuzimele Cornelius January 2011 (has links)
Glycine-N-acyltransferase (GLYAT, EC 2.3.1.13) has been characterised in a number of species including: humans, chimpanzees, rhesus monkeys and bovines. The characterisation of GLYAT from various species contributes to a better understanding of the diversity of the enzyme which in turn might help improve the current understanding of detoxification in mammals. The GLYAT enzyme of both the chacma baboon and vervet monkey has not been characterised. In this project, tissue samples were obtained from a chacma baboon (Papio ursinus) and a vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) to determine the nucleic acid sequence that encodes GLYAT in these two species to broaden our current understanding on the diversity of GLYAT in primates.
A liver of a chacma baboon was used to extract total RNA. Complementary DNA (cDNA) was synthesised using an oligo (dT) primer. An open reading frame (ORF) encoding GLYAT of the chacma baboon was amplified with a PCR (polymerase chain reaction) using primers designed from a human GLYAT transcript. The PCR product containing an ORF encoding GLYAT of the chacma baboon was cloned, sequenced and expressed. The recombinant GLYAT of the chacma baboon expressed well in bacteria, but was insoluble and did not have enzyme activity. A crude cytoplasmic extract was prepared from the liver of a chacma baboon. The objective was to compare enzyme activity between the native and recombinant GLYAT. The prepared liver extract from the chacma baboon was assayed for enzyme activity and compared to the activity in a liver extract from bovine, previously prepared by Ms M Snyders. Both the chacma baboon and bovine liver extracts had GLYAT enzyme activity.
To obtain sequence information on vervet monkey GLYAT, leukocytes were isolated from blood obtained from a living vervet monkey. A human GLYAT gene sequence was used as a reference DNA sequence in the design of PCR primers that were used to amplify the exons of GLYAT of the vervet monkey. All six GLYAT exons were individually amplified and PCR products were sequenced. The sequences were combined to reconstruct an ORF encoding GLYAT of the vervet monkey.
The ORFs coding the GLYAT of both chacma baboon and vervet monkey were found to be 888 bp long (excluding stop codon) and encoded a protein of 296 amino acids. A fragment of 1256 bp of the chacma baboon GLYAT transcript was sequenced. The two GLYAT ORF sequences were translated to amino acid sequences and aligned to that of GLYAT of primates obtained from the Ensembl sequence database. The GLYAT amino acid sequences of the chacma baboon, vervet monkey and rhesus monkey formed a related group, distinct from other primates. The chacma baboon and vervet monkey sequences were 99 % identical to the rhesus monkey sequence and 92.6 % identical to the human sequence. There were 4 new variations introduced by GLYAT amino acid sequences from the chacma baboon and the vervet monkey. The vervet monkey introduced an isoleucine in place of a valine at position 32 and an arginine in place of a histidine or glutamine at position 224. The chacma baboon introduced a tyrosine in place of isoleucine at position 201 and an arginine in place of histidine or glutamine at position 240.
The knowledge generated in this project will broaden the understanding of GLYAT diversity relating to GLYAT in primates. / Thesis (M.Sc. (Biochemistry))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2011
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Foraging and feeding behaviour of chacma baboons in a woodland habitat.Gaynor, David. January 1994 (has links)
Savannah baboons (Papio cynocephalus) have been studied in numerous sites
throughout Africa. They have been found to display a wide variety of foraging and
feeding behaviours. The aim of this study was to describe and quantify these for a
troop in a southern woodland habitat and to determine what factors influence these in
order to understand the choices made by baboons. This was done within an optimal
foraging framework. The study included the development of random walk and optimal
foraging simulation models of day journeys and a comparison of feeding and foraging
before and after the troop divided into two daughter troops. The troop lived in a
complex mosaic of habitat types with a high tree density. The troop's foraging
strategies were found to be consistent with being time minimizers. Distance from the
centre of the home range and distance from the nearest sleeping site had the most
significant effect on utilisation of the home range. The effect of food availability on
habitat use could only be distinguished by the use of simulation models. Comparison of
food encountered by the troop and that encountered in the simulations demonstrated
that the troop did better than could be expected if the day journey routes were random.
The troop's results approximated those of a stochastic short-term optimisation model.
The troop's diet consisted of a higher proportion of fruit than previous studies. The
troop distinguished between commonly utilised foods and those only occasionally used
on the basis of protein/fibre ratio, however food preference between main foods was
not correlated with protein/fibre ratio. Any combination of the main foods would fulfil
their protein requirement. Evidence is given that, without protein being limmiting, the
troop's selection amongst the main foods is based on carbohydrate content. After troop
fission the daughter troops had shorter day journeys, spent less time walking, more
time socialising resting. They also spent more time in food-rich habitats and were more
selective in their diet. These results reinforce the important influence in group size and
suggest that troop fission may be seen as a time-minimising strategy. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1994.
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Resource utilisation of the Chacma baboon in different vegetation types in North-Eastern Mountain Sour Veld, Blyde Canyon Nature ReserveMarais, A. J. (Albertus Johannes) 31 May 2005 (has links)
The Blyde Canyon Nature reserve displays its natural beauty for most National and International visitors all over the World.
The region is renowned for its high rainfall and misty weather, which enhances the natural beauty of the area.
Because of the mist belt effect, the area is one of the largest commercial forestry areas in South Africa. Baboons also seek after the topography and vegetation type (Northeastern mountain sourveld) that is typical of this area and numerous baboon troops occur in this region. This combination is often the cause of conflict between baboons and humans.
The need arise for these baboons to be studied and managed as a component of this very important ecosystem.
The main aims of the study were firstly to identify a natural ranging baboon troop, to habituate them and gather data regarding home range sizes, troop sizes, densities and seasonal food selection and secondly to give a detailed habitat description and vegetation map of the troop's home range.
The baboon activity data was collected in 15-minute intervals over a one year period on a troop at Bourke's Luck. This included all activities such as walking, social, foraging, and resting. The food parts selected as well as the species foraged on was identified. Numerous statistical methods were used on the baboon data such as; the Shapiro Wilk test, Spearman rank-order correlation, ANOVA, and the Kolmogarov-Smirnov two sample test.
There was a positive correlation between home range areas and troop sizes and the baboons preferred certain habitats above others during different seasons.
To give a detailed habitat description of the troop's home range, 50 sample plots was stratified-randomly distributed in order to include all the different stratification units. a TWINSPAN classification, refined by Braun-Blanquet procedures was carried out on the Bourke's Luck section that included the baboons home range. 13 Plant communities, which can be grouped into 7 major community types were identified.
This study resulted in the ecological interpretation of baboon activities related to the ecological interpretation of the vegetation in the baboon troop's home range. / Agriculture, Animal Health and Human Ecology / M.Tech. (Nature Conservation)
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Correlation between systematic and periodontal bone loss in non-human primates Papio ursinusSuliman, Khudaija 20 April 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Diet and behavioural ecology in sacred chacma baboons a case study at Lwamondo Hill in the Limpopo Province, South AfricaMulaudzi, Rendani 03 February 2015 (has links)
MENVSC / Department of Ecology and Resource Management
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