Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where James D. Paterson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by James D. Paterson.


International Journal of Primatology | 1999

Influence of Human Food Consumption on the Time Budget of Vervets

Tania L. Saj; Pascale Sicotte; James D. Paterson

In nonhuman primate groups that utilize crop and food-raiding strategies, the inclusion of human food in the diet can have a pervasive impact on the activity budget. Human food is usually of higher quality and energy per unit than wild food. Thus, metabolic demands may be reached sooner on a human food diet, which in turn leads to improved foraging efficiency. In particular, a reduction in time spent feeding is associated with an increase in time spent resting. We investigated changes in time budget in a group of vervets (Chlorocebus aethiops pygerthrus) living in a tourist and cultivated area of Entebbe, Uganda (Zoo group). Saj collected 123 hr of focal observations on 17 individuals. Human food constituted half of the diet of Zoo group. Access to human food resulted in a high proportion of time resting and a low proportion of time feeding. The group had a small average daily range and a small home range in relation to other reports on unprovisioned groups. The time budget differences suggest that the juveniles spent more time moving and feeding and less time resting than adults did, and that adult females were more social than adult males were. These patterns have been observed in both provisioned and unprovisioned vervet groups. In contrast to a report from an unprovisioned group (Harrison, 1983), lactating females in this provisioned situation were able to maintain feeding and activity levels similar to those of other adults. However, adult females spent significantly less time consuming human food than juveniles did. We suggest that the risk associated with human food consumption may explain the low consumption of human food by females with dependent offspring. The differences may also reflect the different nutritional requirements of lactating females or the tendency for juveniles to be more exploratory than other group members.


International Journal of Primatology | 2003

Effect of group size on activity budgets of Colobus vellerosus in Ghana

Julie A. Teichroeb; Tania L. Saj; James D. Paterson; Pascale Sicotte

Group size influences foraging efficiency in several primates. We examined the activity budgets of 3 groups of Geoffroys pied colobus (Colobus vellerosus) at the Boabeng-Fiema Monkey Sanctuary in Ghana to determine whether larger group size induces scramble competition. We studied 2 groups (B1; N = 7-8 and WW; N = 31-33) occupying slightly overlapping home ranges from August to November 2000. We observed the third group, B2 (N = 15-16), comprising B1 and 7 male invaders in the same home range as B1 from August to November 2001. By comparing groups belonging to the same population and occupying sligthly overlapping or similar home ranges, we were able to control, to a certain extent, for differences in food distribution. We recorded a total of 3353 scans, yielding 14,886 activity records, over 73 days. As with other black-and-white colobus, resting was their most common activity (59%). Intergroup comparisons suggest that time spent feeding, resting and moving did not vary in relation to group size. However, intragroup comparisons between the sexes show that females in the large group spent more time feeding than males did, whereas this was not the case in the small group, which suggests that scramble competition may be occurring among female Colobus vellerosus at BFMS. It is also possible that this may be due to greater nutritional requirements because of a higher proportion of infants in the large group. In fact, the proportion is quite similar between the two groups, lending support to the idea that females in the two groups had comparable nutritional demands due to lactation. This suggests that increased feeding in females in the large group was partly an effect of scramble competition. Group size and group composition also influenced the frequency of social behavior. There was more grooming in the large group, and it was performed mostly by females. The distribution of activities throughout the day was similar to the pattern reported for other black-and-white colobus.


International Journal of Primatology | 1996

Coming to America: Acclimation in macaque body structures and Bergmann’s rule

James D. Paterson

I analyzed somatometric measurements from subsets of the Texas and Oregon transplanted troops of Japanese macaques(Macaca fuscata) to reveal secular changes in body size and shape. Body weights of the Texas population (N = 59) are lower than those of the Oregon population(N = 49) and the founding population from Arashiyama. The adult weights of the Oregon population are significantly higher than the founding population from Mihara. There are significant differences in adult circumferential measures and in skinfolds, which are correlated with the increased weight of the Oregon macaques. The adult Texas macaques have longer limb segments in comparison with the adult Oregon troop members, while the latter have significantly longer heads and trunks. Examination of the developing morphological trends through regression analyses on the complete sample suggests distinctive growth patterns for each population. Members of the Texas population start with smaller initial measurements but hold a steeper growth pattern for limb segments, while the Oregon macaques start larger in most measures and show lower growth rates. I argue that these differences in both somatometry and growth patterns are related to the differing climatic conditions under which the translocated macaques have lived. This set of analyses supports the basic arguments for Bergmann’s rule and Allen’s rule.


Folia Primatologica | 2008

Distribution of diurnal primate species in Togo and Bénin.

Geneviève Campbell; Julie A. Teichroeb; James D. Paterson

The Dahomey Gap, a strip of forest-savanna mosaic that interrupts the lowland rainforests of West Africa, is supposed to have acted as a natural barrier to the distribution of forest-dwelling mammals. However, few thorough mammal surveys have been conducted in this region. This study intended to gather distributional data and help clarify the distribution limits of diurnal primates occurring within this ‘Gap’. Southern Togo and Bénin were surveyed between June and November 2003. The surveys consisted of interviews with hunters and guards from parks and reserves, and walking surveys of forests. As a result, seven diurnal primate species are listed for Togo and Bénin.


Primates | 1980

A case of adoption in a captive group of Mexican spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi)

Alejandro Estrada; James D. Paterson

A case of adoption of a 2.5-month-old infant by an adult female and its development in a captive group of spider monkeys is reported for a period of nine months. The female fully adopted the infant and in addition it was discovered that she was producing milk. The female had not been pregnant nor in contact with an adult male for 12 months prior to the adoption.


Archive | 2006

Aspects of Diet, Foraging, and Seed Predation in Ugandan Forest Baboons

James D. Paterson

Baboon diets have been discussed extensively over the last half-century, but most of the focus has been on the variations and extent seen in savanna-dwelling populations. Forest-living populations have essentially been ignored owing to the great difficulties inherent in observation on the forest floor, combined with research foci on behavioral rather than ecological issues. In this study of the Sonso baboons, the range of food materials included in the species diet is expanded substantially, and a number of unusual processing sequences are noted in addition to the variations on plant parts utilized. The Sonso baboons incorporate a rather high proportion of barks, piths, and gums into their diet and, as noted in the results, appear to ingest a number of phytochemical compounds that might be bioactive. Whether or not these bioactive compounds should be categorized as “regular diet components,” “diet supplements,” or as “medicinal compounds” is indeterminable at present. More research is required.


International Journal of Primatology | 1994

Computer Data Recording and DATAC 6, a BASIC Program for Continuous and Interval Sampling Studies

James D. Paterson; P. Kubicek; S. Tillekeratne

We review aspects of the design and use of computer data recorders in field research and describe the structure and operation of a BASIC language program for the Tandy Model 100/102 notebook computers. The program is flexible and open in that it does not force the use of preconfigured codes. It is intended for research designs that employ continuous (focal-animal) sampling, interval (scan) sampling (Altmann, J., Behaviour49: 227–267,1974), or the focal-time sampling paradigm of Baulu and Redmond (Primates19: 391–400, 1978). The program has been tested by a number of undergraduate and graduate students under field and zoo observational conditions.


African Journal of Ecology | 2001

The conflict between vervet monkeys and farmers at the forest edge in Entebbe, Uganda

Tania L. Saj; Pascale Sicotte; James D. Paterson


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1973

Ecologically differentiated patterns of aggressive and sexual behavior in two troops of Ugandan baboons, Papio anubis

James D. Paterson


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1990

A theory of human and primate evolution. By Colin P. Groves. New York: Oxford University Press. 1989. x + 360 pp., figures, tables, indexes.

James D. Paterson

Collaboration


Dive into the James D. Paterson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alejandro Estrada

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge