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Comparing primate communities: a multivariate approach

Although there have been many studies of the ecology of primates in communities throughout the world, there have been few attempts to compare community ecology within and among continents. In this study the ecological characteristics of the sympatric primate species at eight localities—two from each...

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Published in:Journal of human evolution 1996-06, Vol.30 (6), p.489-510
Main Authors: Fleagle, John G., Reed, Kaye E.
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Language:English
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Reed, Kaye E.
description Although there have been many studies of the ecology of primates in communities throughout the world, there have been few attempts to compare community ecology within and among continents. In this study the ecological characteristics of the sympatric primate species at eight localities—two from each of the major biogeographic areas inhabited by primates today—South America, Africa, Madagascar, and Asia—were compared using a multivariate technique (principal components analysis of the correlation matrix) to summarize the ten dimensional ecological niche space. The most striking clustering of species in ecological multivariate space is according to phylogeny with closely related species showing similar ecological features. Likewise, the ecological characteristics of individual communities are determined by phylogenetic groups present at each locality or biogeographic region. As a result, communities within any biogeographical region are more similar ecologically to one another than to communities from other continental areas. In several measures of ecological diversity among the species comprising each community, the neotropical communities show lower overall diversity than do communities from other continents.
doi_str_mv 10.1006/jhev.1996.0039
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects Africa
Asia
community ecology
Comparative analysis
Environmental studies
Fauna
Human evolution
Madagascar
Methodology and general studies
phylogeny
Prehistory and protohistory
Primates
South America
title Comparing primate communities: a multivariate approach
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