The 42nd Meeting of the American Society of Primatologists Scientific Program
View: All View: Day 1 View: Day 2 View: Day 3 View: Day 4 View: Pre-Conference Author Index Taxonomic Index Expand All Mobile VersionFriday, August 23, 2019 : Day 3 | |||
08:30 AM-08:45 AM: | Opening remarks (Wisconsin Historical Society Auditorium) [113] | ||
08:45 AM-09:45 AM: | Keynote Address: PRIMATES AND CONSERVATION IN THE TIME OF YELLOW FEVER Karen B. Strier (Wisconsin Historical Society Auditorium) [114] | ||
09:45 AM-10:15 AM: | BREAK (Room 109) [115] | ||
+ | 10:15 AM-12:00 PM: | Integrative Symposium: IT’S YOUR RESOURCE: NATIONAL PRIMATE RESEARCH CENTER BIOMARKER CORE LABS: MEASURING PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITION OF NON-HUMAN PRIMATES FOR YOUR RESEARCH Chair: Toni E. Ziegler (Wisconsin Historical Society Auditorium) [116] | |
12:00 PM-01:30 PM: | LUNCH (On your own) [124] | ||
12:00 PM-01:30 PM: | Board of Directors Meeting (Room 220) [125] | ||
01:30 PM-02:30 PM: | A WORKING LIFE IN SCIENCE AND ART: PRIMATES, TURTLES, COMIC BOOKS, AND THE SENSE OF WONDER: Stephen David Nash (Wisconsin Historical Society Auditorium) [126] | ||
02:30 PM-02:45 PM: | BREAK (Room 109) [127] | ||
02:45 PM-05:15 PM: | PRACTICAL STRATEGIES FOR DESIGNING PROGRAMS THAT GENERATE CONSERVATION ENGAGEMENT AND INITIATIVE IN HOST COUNTRIES: Sylvia Atsalis (Room 313) [128] | ||
+ | 02:45 PM-04:45 PM: | Session: Colony Management Chair: Dawn Abney (Room 225) [129] | |
+ | 02:45 PM-03:45 PM: | Session: Welfare/Health/Veterinary Medicine Chair: Ashley Edes (Room 226) [137] | |
02:45 PM-05:00 PM: | Roundtable: The Scientific Legacy and Impact of Stephen J. Suomi: Individuals are different! Chair: J. D. Higley (Room 309) [142] | ||
03:45 PM-04:45 PM: | Workshop: Grant Writing Chair: Colin Brand (Room 226) [143] | ||
05:00 PM-06:30 PM: | Past Presidents' Reception (Room 220) [144] | ||
- | 06:00 PM-08:00 PM: | Poster Session #2 (Alumni Lounge) [145] | |
Behavior | |||
WHY DO SQUIRREL MONKEYS URINE WASH? A FIELD STUDY OF SAIMIRI COLLINSI IN EASTERN AMAZONIA, BRAZIL J. M. Jasper, N. A. Delacth, S. C. Aghababian, C. E. Brown, A. I. Stone[ 223] |
|||
Breeding/Reproduction | |||
EFFECT OF PREGNANCY ON ALOPECIA IN ADULT FEMALE BABOONS (PAPIO HAMADRYAS SPP.) C. K. Lutz[ 170] |
|||
Colony Management/Enrichment | |||
A COMPARISON OF THE EFFICACY OF FORAGING TOYS FOR LABORATORY RHESUS MACAQUES (MACACA MULATTA): AN ACTIVITY-BASED USAGE ANALYSIS TO REFINE THE DELIVERY OF FORAGING OPPORTUNITIES. B. N. Peterson, P. J. Pierre[ 164] |
|||
Conservation | |||
PERCEPTIONS OF PRIMATES AND PROTECTED AREAS: ETHNOPRIMATOLOGICAL INSIGHTS FROM PACOCHE ECUADOR T. L. Britton[ 156] |
|||
PHOTOGRAPHY INSPIRING CHILDREN IN CONSERVATION (PICC); A PRIMATE EXTINCTION CRISIS OUTREACH PROJECT K. West, J. R. Aliperti, C. Borgerson[ 166] |
|||
Ecology | |||
ECOLOGICAL FACTORS AND SPATIAL GROUP COHESION IN WILD SAMANGO MONKEY GROUPS L. R. LaBarge, S. W. Margulis, C. M. Berman, R. A. Hill[ 167] |
|||
Genetics | |||
EVIDENCE OF SELECTION IN THE UCP1 GENE REGION SUGGESTS LOCAL ADAPTATION TO COLD TEMPERATURES IN SOUTH AFRICAN VERVET MONKEYS (CHLOROCEBUS PYGERYTHRUS) C. M. Gagnon, A. J. Jasinska, N. B. Freimer, J. P. Grobler, T. R. Turner, C. A. Schmitt[ 155] |
|||
POLYMORPHISMS IN VASOPRESSIN V1A RECEPTOR GENE (AVPR1A) ARE ASSOCIATED WITH PLAY, AFFILIATIVE, AND EXPLORATORY BEHAVIOR IN CHIMPANZEES (PAN TROGLODYTES) S. J. Neal Webb, S. J. Schapiro, W. D. Hopkins[ 159] |
|||
Infant Development/Maternal Behavior | |||
PREDICTORS OF INFANT SURVIVAL IN FREE-RANGING VERVET MONKEYS (CHLOROCEBUS PYGERYTHRUS) FROM A HIGH LATITUDE, SEMI-ARID ENVIRONMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA S. E. Varsanyi, S. Henzi, L. Barrett, D. Forrester[ 149] |
|||
GENOTYPIC VARIATION IN THE SEROTONIN TRANSPORTER GENE IS ASSOCIATED WITH MATERNAL RESTRAINT AND REJECTION OF INFANTS: A NONHUMAN PRIMATE MODEL OF CORRAL-LIVING RHESUS MACAQUES (MACACA MULATTA) J. F. Reyelts, E. K. Wood, K. L. Luck, Z. J. Jager, J. P. Capitanio, J. D. Higley[ 150] |
|||
PRENATAL ANDROGEN EXPOSURE (2D:4D RATIO) IS ASSOCIATED WITH LOWER STRESS-INDUCED CORTISOL RESPONSE IN CORRAL-LIVING FEMALE RHESUS MACAQUES (MACACA MULATTA) P. Jarman, E. K. Wood, E. Cash, A. Baxter, J. Capitanio, J. D. Higley[ 153] |
|||
Neuroscience/Pharmacology | |||
CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM MONOAMINE RESPONSE TO ALCOHOL IS ASSOCIATED WITH FUTURE ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION IN LABORATORY-HOUSED RHESUS MACAQUES (MACACA MULATTA) E. K. Wood, D. P. Lemmon, N. D. Mullen, S. G. Lindell, M. L. Schwandt, C. S. Barr, S. J. Suomi[ 152] |
|||
AGING ASSOCIATES WITH LOSS OF SOMATOSTATINERGIC CELLS BUT INCREASED NUMBER OF ASTROCYTES IN TWO ANIMAL MODELS: CALLITHRIX JACCHUS (COMMON-MARMOSET) AND TUPAIA BELANGERI (TREE-SHREW) D. Cuervo-Zanatta, J. Rodríguez-Callejas, E. Fuchs, C. Perez-Cruz[ 169] |
|||
Other | |||
HOW MANY NONHUMAN PRIMATES ARE IN RESEARCH IN THE US? ANALYSIS OF ANNUAL ANIMAL NUMBER REPORTS FOR REGISTERED RESEARCH FACILITIES N. Rose, A. Brownell, A. J. Bennett[ 157] |
|||
IS A PICTURE WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS? INITIAL ANALYSIS OF VALENCE-FRAMING EFFECTS ON CHIMPANZEE (PAN TROGLODYTES) WELFARE DONATION APPEALS A. C. Kwiatt, L. M. Hopper, S. R. Ross[ 160] |
|||
Physiology/Immunology | |||
SURVEY OF GASTROINTESTINAL PARASITES AMONG FOUR DIURNAL PRIMATE SPECIES IN THE GAMBIA J. D. CRAMER, S. G. SAPP, Y. QVARNSTROM, E. JARJU, M. JALLOW, M. ANTONIO, E. FOSTER-NYARKO, R. S. BRADBURY[ 111] |
|||
DIET AND DIGESTION IN CAPTIVE COMMON MARMOSETS (CALLITHRIX JACHUS): HEALTH AND MANAGEMENT IMPLICATIONS M. L. Power, J. Adams, K. Solonika, R. J. Colman, C. N. Ross, S. D. Tardif[ 147] |
|||
MAINTENANCE ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF ADULT NON-REPRODUCTIVE COMMON MARMOSETS (CALLITHRIX JACCHUS) J. Adams, C. N. Ross, S. D. Tardif, R. Colman, M. L. Power[ 148] |
|||
OBESITY, DAILY ACTIVITY, AND RESTING METABOLIC RATE IN NONREPRODUCTIVE MARMOSETS (CALLITHRIX JACCHUS) C. N. Ross, J. Adams, M. L. Power, R. Colman, S. D. Tardif[ 158] |
|||
Research Methods | |||
RESEARCHERS’ ETHICAL CONCERNS REGARDING HABITUATING NONHUMAN PRIMATES AND PERCEIVED ETHICAL DUTIES TO THEIR SUBJECTS: RESULTS OF AN ONLINE SURVEY V. M. Green, K. I. Gabriel[ 165] |
|||
Veterinary Medicine | |||
A POPULATION-LEVEL INTERVENTION FOR OBESITY USING A LOW-STARCH AND HIGH-FIBER BISCUIT DIET IN A TROOP OF OUTDOOR LAB-HOUSED JAPANESE MACAQUES (MACACA FUSCATA) A. Haertel[ 162] |
|||
Welfare & Health | |||
TEMPERAMENT CORRELATES WITH DESENSITIZATION TRAINING IN RHESUS MACAQUES R. MacAllister, L. M. Houser, K. Coleman[ 146] |
|||
BEDDING AS AN ENRICHMENT STRATEGY IN GROUP-HOUSED MAURITIAN CYNOMOLGUS MACAQUES (MACACA FASCICULARIS) M. Janavaris, L. Bader, K. Coleman, P. Kievit[ 151] |
|||
DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF A SYSTEMATIC ASSESSMENT TOOL FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ENRICHMENT PROGRAMS IN ZOOS, SANCTUARIES, AND RESEARCH FACILITIES THAT HOUSE NONHUMAN PRIMATES E. G. Schoenbeck, M. B. Dutton, A. J. Novak, B. Meidam, P. J. Pierre, A. J. Bennett[ 154] |
|||
UTILIZING VIDEO CONFERENCE TECHNOLOGY AS A TOOL FOR PAIR INTRODUCTION FOR RHESUS MACAQUES (MACACA MULATTA) C. Stull, A. Heagerty, K. Coleman[ 161] |
|||
LIFE IS BETTER WITH FRIENDS: THE BENEFITS OF GROUP HOUSING CYNOMOLGUS MACAQUES (MACACA FASCICULARIS) DURING QUARANTINE L. A. Bader, M. Janavaris, L. Houser, K. Prongay, C. Cullin, J. Sacha, K. Coleman, P. Kievit[ 163] |
|||
LIPID MARKERS ARE NOT BETTER PREDICTORS OF DISEASE AND MORTALITY RISK IN ZOO-HOUSED WESTERN LOWLAND GORILLAS (GORILLA GORILLA GORILLA) THAN AGE AND SEX ALONE A. N. Edes, J. L. Brown, K. L. Edwards[ 168] |
|||
08:00 PM-10:00 PM: | Student Mixer Chair: Colin Brand (Rathskeller, Student Union) [171] | ||