Lynne A. Isbell is a professor of anthropology at the University of California, Davis. She is the author of The Fruit, the Tree, and the Serpent: Why We See So Well and a coauthor of Black, Brown, and White: Stories Straight Outta Compton.
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Description
Preface 1. Highlights in the History of Primate Socioecology 2. Dispersal and Philopatry 3. Introducing the Variable Home Range Sharing Model and its Classification System for Primate Social Organizations 4. Using Movement Strategies to Identify Constraints on Home Range Expansion and their Relative Importance for Different Female Social Organizations 5. Beginning to Test the Variable Home Range Sharing Model 6. Problems with Predation as a Selective Force on Primate Social Organizations 7. How Refocusing can Resolve the Nocturnal/Diurnal and Solitary Forager/Group Living Divide 8. Male Contributions to Female Social Organizations 9. Questions that May Arise Appendix References Acknowledgments Index