The International Journal of Primatology is an official publication of the International Primatological Society, published by Springer. It is devoted to fundamental research on primates and aims to promote the survival of the primate populations of the world. The International Journal of Primatology publishes high-quality original articles, reviews, commentaries, and book reviews. It reflects the broad theoretical foundations of our field and publishes laboratory and field studies from a diversity of disciplines, including anthropology, anatomy, ethology, paleontology, psychology, sociology, and zoology. It regularly publishes guest-edited special issues on particular themes
The Royal Anthropological Institute’s first annual one-day postgraduate conference was hosted by the...
The Pliocene fossil record is dominated by Old World monkeys and hominins. Pliocene lemur, loris, ta...
Paleobiology, the study of ancient life, gives us a window onto the habits, biology, and behavior of...
Phyllis C. Lee is Professor of Psychology at Stirling University, Scotland. She has conducted fieldw...
The shared evolutionary histories and anatomical similarities between humans and non-human primates ...
Strategies for conserving species threatened with extinction are often driven by ecological data. Ho...
Nonhuman primates, our closest biological relatives, play important roles in the livelihoods, cultur...
This commentary emerged from a panel presentation at the International Primatological Society Congre...
Biodiversity conservation is one of the grand challenges facing society. Many people interested in b...
Neotropical Primates are commonly threatened mostly caused by deforestation and hunt pressure. It is...
Canopy ISSN: 2054-2070 Canopy is an in-house publication with contributions from staff, students an...
This special issue of Durham Anthropology Journal was edited by Muhammad Aurang Zeb Mughal as a conf...
Baboons, members of the genus Papio, comprise six closely related species distributed throughout sub...
The southern African cercopithecid (monkey) fauna has undergone a profound change in composition and...
Evolutionary Biology of the Primates. By W. C. Osman Hill, x + 233 pp. Academic Press, London and Ne...
The Royal Anthropological Institute’s first annual one-day postgraduate conference was hosted by the...
The Pliocene fossil record is dominated by Old World monkeys and hominins. Pliocene lemur, loris, ta...
Paleobiology, the study of ancient life, gives us a window onto the habits, biology, and behavior of...
Phyllis C. Lee is Professor of Psychology at Stirling University, Scotland. She has conducted fieldw...
The shared evolutionary histories and anatomical similarities between humans and non-human primates ...
Strategies for conserving species threatened with extinction are often driven by ecological data. Ho...
Nonhuman primates, our closest biological relatives, play important roles in the livelihoods, cultur...
This commentary emerged from a panel presentation at the International Primatological Society Congre...
Biodiversity conservation is one of the grand challenges facing society. Many people interested in b...
Neotropical Primates are commonly threatened mostly caused by deforestation and hunt pressure. It is...
Canopy ISSN: 2054-2070 Canopy is an in-house publication with contributions from staff, students an...
This special issue of Durham Anthropology Journal was edited by Muhammad Aurang Zeb Mughal as a conf...
Baboons, members of the genus Papio, comprise six closely related species distributed throughout sub...
The southern African cercopithecid (monkey) fauna has undergone a profound change in composition and...
Evolutionary Biology of the Primates. By W. C. Osman Hill, x + 233 pp. Academic Press, London and Ne...
The Royal Anthropological Institute’s first annual one-day postgraduate conference was hosted by the...
The Pliocene fossil record is dominated by Old World monkeys and hominins. Pliocene lemur, loris, ta...
Paleobiology, the study of ancient life, gives us a window onto the habits, biology, and behavior of...