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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Investigating primate tourism in Morocco using a multidisciplinary approach

Maréchal, Laëtitia January 2015 (has links)
Wildlife tourism is a growing industry, with potential benefits for the conservation of endangered species. In this thesis, I explore wildlife tourism at a site in Morocco, using a multidisciplinary approach which considers both the attitudes and expectations of tourists, and the responses of, and impacts on, Barbary macaques. Different types of tourists, mostly Moroccan nationals, visited the site and frequently gave food to the macaques. The desire to feed the monkeys appeared to be driven by different motivations such as the reward from sharing food, the creation of a relationship or taking control over these animals. Such interactions therefore shape a particular tourist experience; this can lead in some cases to a degree of disappointment about the authenticity of the wildlife experience. Considering how the monkeys responded to tourists, I found evidence that they use a range of behavioural coping mechanisms to cope with the potentially conflicting motivational situations associated with the risks of interacting with tourists and the attraction of potential food. I propose a framework to aid understanding of how the trade-off between threat and attraction can lead to different coping mechanisms being deployed. Looking at potential effects of tourist provisioning on the health of the macaques, I found evidence for potential negative impacts in terms of increased risk of disease transmission, elevated stress levels and increased body size. The results also highlighted the key issue of not knowing what is optimum health in wild animals, making interpretation of the findings difficult. The multidisciplinary approach adopted in this thesis provided a useful tool to explore different aspects of primate tourism at the site from both tourist and animal standpoints. This approach led to the development of a new concept, optimal provisioning, which takes into consideration the different costs and benefits of provisioning wildlife to the various parties involved. It is hoped that this approach will prove useful in developing pragmatic solutions to the question of whether and how much provisioning may be acceptable in wildlife tourism contexts.
2

Identification et caractérisation moléculaires des rétrovirus simiens et évaluation du risque de transmission à l'homme en Afrique Centrale / Identification and molecular characterization of simian retroviruses and assessment of human transmission risk in Central Africa

Ahuka Mundeke, Steve 24 November 2011 (has links)
De nombreux primates d'Afrique sont infectés par les SIV et SLTV en particulier par ceux reconnus comme les ancêtres du VIH et HTLV à l'origine de graves épidémies chez l'homme. Des humains en Afrique continuent d'être exposés à ces virus lors des activités liées à la chasse. Ainsi le risque de transmissions inter-espèces des rétrovirus des primates aux humains persiste toujours dans cette région. Nous avons montré que le mangabey agile est infecté par un SIVagi phylogénétiquement très proche du SIVrcm infectant le mangabey à collier blanc au Cameroun. Nous avons montré aussi que les SIVdeb infectant les cercopithèques de Brazza se regroupent phylogénétiquement selon leurs régions géographiques d'origine non seulement à travers l'Afrique Equatoriale mais aussi à l'intérieur même du Cameroun. Nous avons adapté et validé un outil sérologique (Luminex) qui permet de tester près de 34 antigènes SIV/HIV simultanément. Cet outil et d'autres nous ont permis ensuite de documenter une prévalence globale élevée d'infection SIV et STLV chez les singes chassés pour la viande de brousse en RDC, particulièrement chez les espèces les plus consommées. De nouvelles lignées de SIV et STLV ont aussi été décrites. Par ailleurs, nous avons montré pour la première fois que les fécès peuvent être utilisés pour la détection des STLV chez les bonobos qui sont naturellemnt infectés par les STLV-2 et 3. En revanche, aucune évidence d'infection SIV chez les bonobos n'a été observée. Les travaux de cette thèse contribuent à l'amélioration des connaissances sur les infections rétrovirales chez les primates non humains au Cameroun et en RDC, complètent les informations disponibles sur les réservoirs du VIH-1 et HTLV et enfin fournissent des éléments d'appréciation du risque de transmission de ces virus à l'homme en RDC et au Cameroun. / SIVs and SLTVs infecting apes and monkeys in Africa are the progenitors of HIV and HTLV. Numerous African non-human primates are infected with SIV and STLV and humans continue to be exposed to these viruses by hunting and handling of primate bushmeat. Therefore the risk of cross-species transmissions from primates to humans is still persistent. We showed that SIVagi infecting captive agile mangabey is most closely related to SIVrcm from a wild-caught red capped mangabey from Cameroon. We observed also phylogeographic clustering among SIVdeb strains from Cameroon, DRC and Uganda, but also among distinct areas in Cameroon. We adapted and evaluated a novel high troughput immune assay that included 34 different HIV and SIV antigens in a single well. Using this tool and others, we found a high SIV and STLV prevalence especially among the most hunted monkeys in DRC. We identified also new SIV and STLV lineages. On the other hand, we did not find any evidence of SIV infection in bonobos. However, we showed, for the first time, that fecal samples could be used to detect STLV infection in bonobos that are naturally infected with STLV-2 and 3. The results obtained during this thesis contribute to the improvement of our knowledge on retroviral infections in nonhuman primates from Central Africa, complete information on HIV and HTLV reservoirs and provide background information on human transmission risk of these infections in central Africa especially in DRC.
3

Human and non-human primate preferences for faces and facial attractiveness

Griffey, Jack Alexander Fernall January 2011 (has links)
For humans and non-human primates (NHPs) the face represents a particularly important source of social information providing a means of conspecific recognition and cues to personal details including sex, age, and emotional state. The human face may also be fundamental in the transmission to conspecifics of other forms of socially relevant information including the display of facial traits associated with sexual attraction and mate choice. A wealth of experimental literature indicates that humans display robust preferences for certain facial traits associated with facial attractiveness including preferences for bilateral facial symmetry, facial averageness and sexually dimorphic faces and facial features. It is thought that these preferences have evolved via sexual selection, and may be adaptive, due to the role that these specific facial features play in reliably signalling to others the possession of heritable genetic quality or ‘good genes’. Therefore, from an evolutionary perspective, it is possible that certain facial preferences may represent an evolutionary adaptation for the selection of potential mate quality. However, despite similarities between human and NHP face processing and recognition abilities, the shared evolutionary history and social importance of faces to primates in general, and the potential importance of these preferences in the mate choice decisions of NHPs, very little research has investigated the extent to which NHPs display comparable preferences to humans for these specific facial traits. Consequently, the aim of the following thesis was to comparatively assess the general and more specific preferences that humans and NHPs display for faces and for traits associated with facial attractiveness. Data was compiled from preference studies examining the visual preferences displayed by two species of NHP (brown capuchins (Cebus apella) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)) for conspecific faces manipulated for those facial traits associated with attractiveness, and from a single study of brown capuchins examining their general visual preferences for various types of facial information. Comparative preference studies were also conducted upon human adults and infants examining the visual and declared preferences that they display for manipulations of facial attractiveness. Data showed that despite possessing general preferences for certain faces and facial information, generally NHPs displayed no significant preferences for those facial traits thought to influences judgements of attractiveness in humans. Possible reasons for this absence of preference for these particular facial traits and the evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed.

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