Working Group
Primates are highly charismatic and often serve as flagship species in conservation efforts. They are also the closest living relatives of humans, and therefore hold the keys to resolving many questions about human evolution and ecology. However, the slow life histories of primates, combined with their complex social systems, their behavioral plasticity, and the challenging field conditions in which primate researchers must work, have severely limited analyses of mortality and fertility in wild, unprovisioned primate populations. This in turn limits comparative analyses that can shed light on the population dynamics and the social and ecological adaptations that have shaped both human and nonhuman primate evolution. We propose a Primate Life Histories Working Group to compare mortality and fertility schedules across taxa, to evaluate a set of hypotheses about the roles that phylogeny, ecology, and behavior play in shaping primate mortality and fertility patterns, and to examine whether life history theory predicts which vital rates are most variable across species. Using unique, individual-based life history data that have been collected from wild populations by nine working group participants over a minimum of 19 years, we will develop age-specific mortality and fertility schedules and create population projection matrices for each species. Our immediate goals are to test current hypotheses about the evolution of life histories in order to advance our understanding of primate evolution. Our longer-term goal is to move toward a collaborative, shared databank allowing analyses of irreplaceable life history data on wild primates.
Memorandum of Understanding among the PLHD Working Group Members
Evolutionary ecology of primate life histories
PI(s): | Karen B Strier (University of Wisconsin-Madison) Susan C Alberts (Duke University) |
Start Date: | 1-Sep-2006 |
End Date: | 31-Aug-2008 |
Keywords: | life histories, behavior, database, human evolution, NU |
Primates are highly charismatic and often serve as flagship species in conservation efforts. They are also the closest living relatives of humans, and therefore hold the keys to resolving many questions about human evolution and ecology. However, the slow life histories of primates, combined with their complex social systems, their behavioral plasticity, and the challenging field conditions in which primate researchers must work, have severely limited analyses of mortality and fertility in wild, unprovisioned primate populations. This in turn limits comparative analyses that can shed light on the population dynamics and the social and ecological adaptations that have shaped both human and nonhuman primate evolution. We propose a Primate Life Histories Working Group to compare mortality and fertility schedules across taxa, to evaluate a set of hypotheses about the roles that phylogeny, ecology, and behavior play in shaping primate mortality and fertility patterns, and to examine whether life history theory predicts which vital rates are most variable across species. Using unique, individual-based life history data that have been collected from wild populations by nine working group participants over a minimum of 19 years, we will develop age-specific mortality and fertility schedules and create population projection matrices for each species. Our immediate goals are to test current hypotheses about the evolution of life histories in order to advance our understanding of primate evolution. Our longer-term goal is to move toward a collaborative, shared databank allowing analyses of irreplaceable life history data on wild primates.
Memorandum of Understanding among the PLHD Working Group Members
Related products
Software and Datasets- Alberts SC, Altmann J, Brockman DK, Cords M, Fedigan LM, Pusey A, Stoinski TS, Strier KB, Morris WF, Bronikowski AM (2013) Data from: Reproductive aging patterns in primates reveal that humans are distinct. Dryad Digital Repository. doi:10.5061/dryad.m327n
- Hilmar Lapp, Xianhua Liu, members of the Primate Life Histories Working Group. Primate Life Histories Database. Code at http://github.com/NESCent/plhdb , online application at http://plhdb.org
- Reproductive aging patterns in primates reveal that humans are distinct Alberts SC, Altmann J, Brockman DK, Cords M, Fedigan LM, Pusey A, Stoinski T, Strier KB, Morris WF, Bronkowski AM. 2013. Reproductive aging patterns in primates reveal that humans are distinct. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 110: 13440-13445.
- Seasonal mortality patterns in non-human primates: Implications for variation in selection pressures across environments Gogarten, J. F., Brown, L. M. Chapman, C. A., Cords, M., Doran-Sheehy, D., Fedigan, L. M., Grine, F. E., Perry, D., Pusey, A. E., Sterck, E. H. M., Wich, S. A., and Wright, P. C. 2012. Seasonal mortality patterns in non-human primates: Implications for variation in selection pressures across environments. Evolution 66(10): 3252-3266.
- Aging in the Natural World: Comparative Data Reveal Similar Mortality Patterns Across Primates A. M. Bronikowski, J. Altmann, D. K. Brockman, M. Cords, L. M. Fedigan, A. Pusey, T. Stoinski, W. F. Morris, K. B. Strier and S. C. Alberts 2011 Aging in the Natural World: Comparative Data Reveal Similar Mortality Patterns Across Primates, Science, volume 331, issue 6022, pp. 1325-1328
- Low Demographic Variability in Wild Primate Populations: Fitness Impacts of Variation, Covariation, and Serial Correlation in Vital Rates Morris WF, Altmann J, Brockman DK, Fedigan LM, Pusey AE, Stoinski TA, Bronikowski AM, Alberts SC, Strier KB. Low demographic variability in wild primate populations: fitness impacts of variation, covariation, and serial correlation in vital rates. American Naturalist 177: E14-E28.
- The Primate Life History Database: a unique shared ecological data resource Strier, K.B., J. Altmann, D.K. Brockman, et al. (2010). The Primate Life History Database: a unique shared ecological data resource. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 1(2): 199-211.
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