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Thursday, November 13, 2014

Comparative Primate Blog Post

Lemurs
Lemurs are a unique primate that is perfectly suited to live on the vast terrain of Madagascar. Just 250 miles off the east coast of Africa this environment is lush in tropical vegetation, marshlands, dry forest, deserts, and beautiful coral reef surrounding the island. With endemic plants that are rarely seen anywhere on earth like rare species of orchids, Didiereaceae (makes up the spiny forest) palms and baobabs. Lemurs and other animals along with vegetation have been able to flourish in this area because of its isolation for so long. Major predators are not native to the island and this allows smaller mammals like the lemurs to thrive and feed on the vegetation (herbivore).


The body size of the lemur is small (pygmy to average cat size) which works it perfectly since it’s arboreal in trait and rarely on ground level. The sexual dimorphism is low and males are slightly bigger here and there but not by much. A more noticeable distinction is the sexual dichromatic instead of an overall size difference (sexes are different as seen in their fur coloration) like in birds and insects. Lemurs are also not male dominant but a female dominant society. 


Spider Monkey
This unique monkey has several species that can be found in tropical jungles from South and Central America. Tall hardwood and softwood help provide housing for creatures like the spider monkey and local vegetation hides them from predator. For an arboreal animal living in the high canopy is best because food as well as water source is plentiful and other animals like small reptiles and insects complete the omnivorous diet of the spider monkey. Troops are the group name for spider monkeys and rather that a male searching for a new group to join, the female is the one seeking a new troop to look for a mate.
 Depending on the species, spider monkeys can reach vary in height and weight, but the sexual dimorphism seems to be low overall so both male and female seem similar in size and shape. Generally smaller primates are equal in size to their mate and tree dwellers while larger primates need the size difference to protect their mate from dangerous  predator that share the ground with them.


Baboon
Old World Monkeys or baboons have five species and can be found traveling in troops within the different regions provided by their habitats in Africa and Western Arabia.  Baboons are relatively adaptable as they can be in the dry savanna, woodlands and tropical rainforests. The different regions provide shelter and nourishment (Fruits baring trees, seeds, small animals and eggs) for the yellow, olive, guinea, chacma, and hamadryas baboons. Depending on the species the sexual dimorphism can vary but primarily the overall result is that males are larger than females in size and canine development. Males are the dominant of the sexes and can be 31in in length weighting 40-66lbs whereas the female 18in overall length weighting in 20-30lbs and tails add on 16-18ins to both male and female (example hamadryas baboons.)
The body size between the sexes is important because baboons live in hierarchical troops. Baboon harem consists of 4-6 females and young with a dominant male and larger troop of 50-200 with a mixture of females ranging in ages with dominant males as hunters and protectors. Baboons are terrestrial animals and larger males are needed to protect the females and young within their groups as they forage for food. 



















Gibbon

Gibbons are small ape species (small or large based on the genera) and like the baboons are omnivores (eat plant and animal matter). Gibbons can be found in tropical rainforest of Southeast Asia as well as neighboring countries like Thailand and Malaysia. The typical rainforest gibbons live in includes over 2,000 vine vegetation throughout the forest, moderate rainfall, and high canopies that let in a small percentage of sunlight. The majority vegetation overall in rainforest are 70% different trees like with hardwoods (), baobab, coconut, and even some of the tallest tree species tualangs. Diverse tree species are ideal for gibbons as they are arboreal in nature meaning they spend nearly their entire lives within the upper canopy and emergent of the forest. This provides them with shelter, nourishment, even protection from predators like leopards larger snakes, etc.

Slender bodies and elongated arms, no tails and smaller physique make them agile in tree tops. And with their sexual dimorphism low they are almost equal in height and weight. Gibbon troops consist of territorial male and female mates and their offspring which they equally care for until the young are able to start a family of their own. With fewer dangers to the Gibbons as they are high in the canopy the need for a large protector isn't as defined as in Baboons.



Chimpanzee
Chimpanzees are part of the Great Ape family (like humans and gorillas) and are intelligent for the use of tools from rocks/forest materials and cognitive thinking. Chimpanzees are omnivores because they eat both meat of smaller animals and vegetation. Chimpanzees can be found in dry savannas areas (with shrubs and isolated trees and open canopy), different forest terrain (evergreen, swamp) and dry woodlands of Central and Western Africa (equatorial forest “belt”). They are both terrestrial and arboreal in nature, generally on the ground however they built nest of vegetation in trees while they live in social communities.

The sexual dimorphism is minor as the males are slightly bigger than the females. Males can range from 90-115lbs whereas females are 57-110lbs and half a foot smaller than a height of 4-5 ft. (males). Chimpanzees live in multi-male and multi-female social groups, status can be solved with sexual dimorphism an alpha must be bigger and therefor stronger to protect and have the right to mate. And because they are primarily on the ground knuckle walking predators have a better advantage to attack then those of solely arboreal trait primates.







This assignment have been very interesting I'm sure I forgot things but hopefully I included things unique about these five primates and how they have adapted to their environment even with outside causing harm like deforestation, pollution, and hunting. Smaller primates were generally arboreal and didn't need a show of force because the areas they lived in secluded them more from predators. (Larger primates) because of their size, were more terrestrial and  males more dominant and larger to ensure the safety of group members as well as potential mates. I like that the primate groups socialize and make bonds as they groom, travel and live together as well.   


5 comments:

  1. Hello Elsy,
    Nicely done! I like the pictures you have chosen for your blog post. It not only shows the primate but it also shows the environment they live in. Also, good details about the qualities and traits of all the primates.

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    1. Thanks Jennifer, it was all interesting info I was just hoping to include everything I learned and capture the details with photos to match.

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  2. Overall, good descriptions and good discussions on the relationships between body size/sexual dimorphism and the environment. This can be a tricky one to figure out but you picked up on the relationship between terrestrial and arboreal living and the expression of sexual dimorphism. That was quite good. The only information that should have been included was body size information for a few of your primates, such as spider monkeys and gibbons. You make some references to body size but never give specifics.

    Good discussion, but recognize that human impacts happen too quickly for animals to adapt to these environmental changes. That is why they are so dangerous. The adaptations we are studying here are the result of natural forces impacting populations over 100's of thousands of years. Again, good connection made between sexual dimorphism and terrestrial or arboreal lifestyles. This isn't a guaranteed relationship, but it certainly does have an general predictable impact.

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  3. hi elsy,
    cool information about the chimpanzee and the sexual dimorphism. I never knew a chimpanzee can weigh so much. I like that you described well if there was a big difference between the male and female. I enjoyed reading your blog post!

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  4. Hey Elsy,

    Nice post! what caught my attention was that Gibbons does not have a tail. Since they are known for being very agile and balanced as tree dwellers, i would think they would possess a tail for some kind of support.

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