Animal traditions can affect survival by improving how individuals use their environment. They are inherited through social learning and are restricted to small subpopulations. As a result, traditions are rare and their preservation needs to be considered in biodiversity conservation. We studied Burmese long-tailed macaques Macaca fascicularis aurea living on Piak Nam Yai Island in Laem Son National Park, Thailand, which maintain a rare stone tool-using tradition for processing hard-shelled invertebrate prey along the island's shores. We found the population had 192 individuals in nine groups and most individuals used stone tools. This population is under pressure from the local human community through the development of farms and release o...
We explored variation in patterns of percussive stone-tool use on coastal foods by Burmese long-tail...
A growing body of research focuses on how anthropogenic factors affect the behavior and ecology of p...
In many tropical regions of the world, humans and nonhuman primates share habitats, and their intera...
Anthropogenic disturbances have a detrimental impact on the natural world; the vast expansion of pal...
Anthropogenic disturbances have a detrimental impact on the natural world; the vast expansion of pal...
Coastal populations of macaques maintain rare stone-tool-use traditions for exploiting shellfish. I ...
More than 3 million years of excavated archaeological evidence underlies most major insights into th...
Tool use has allowed humans to become one of the most successful species. However, tool-assisted for...
Anthropogenic disturbances have a detrimental impact on the natural world; the vast expansion of pal...
Tool use has allowed humans to become one of the most successful species. However, tool-assisted for...
We explored variation in patterns of percussive stone-tool use on coastal foods by Burmese long-tail...
Burmese long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea) are one of a limited number of wild animal ...
Burmese long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea) are one of a limited number of wild animal ...
<div><p>We explored variation in patterns of percussive stone-tool use on coastal foods by Burmese l...
The human-macaque interface in Asia is increasingly the focus of numerous studies raising the issue ...
We explored variation in patterns of percussive stone-tool use on coastal foods by Burmese long-tail...
A growing body of research focuses on how anthropogenic factors affect the behavior and ecology of p...
In many tropical regions of the world, humans and nonhuman primates share habitats, and their intera...
Anthropogenic disturbances have a detrimental impact on the natural world; the vast expansion of pal...
Anthropogenic disturbances have a detrimental impact on the natural world; the vast expansion of pal...
Coastal populations of macaques maintain rare stone-tool-use traditions for exploiting shellfish. I ...
More than 3 million years of excavated archaeological evidence underlies most major insights into th...
Tool use has allowed humans to become one of the most successful species. However, tool-assisted for...
Anthropogenic disturbances have a detrimental impact on the natural world; the vast expansion of pal...
Tool use has allowed humans to become one of the most successful species. However, tool-assisted for...
We explored variation in patterns of percussive stone-tool use on coastal foods by Burmese long-tail...
Burmese long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea) are one of a limited number of wild animal ...
Burmese long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea) are one of a limited number of wild animal ...
<div><p>We explored variation in patterns of percussive stone-tool use on coastal foods by Burmese l...
The human-macaque interface in Asia is increasingly the focus of numerous studies raising the issue ...
We explored variation in patterns of percussive stone-tool use on coastal foods by Burmese long-tail...
A growing body of research focuses on how anthropogenic factors affect the behavior and ecology of p...
In many tropical regions of the world, humans and nonhuman primates share habitats, and their intera...