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    Human impact erodes chimpanzee behavioral diversity

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    Issue Date
    2019
    Author
    Kühl, Hjalmar S.
    Boesch, Christophe
    Kulik, Lars
    Haas, Fabian
    Arandjelovic, Mimi
    Dieguez, Paula
    Bocksberger, Gaëlle
    McElreath, Mary Brooke
    Agbor, Anthony
    Angedakin, Samuel
    Ayimisin, Emmanuel Ayuk
    Bailey, Emma
    Barubiyo, Donatienne
    Bessone, Mattia
    Brazzola, Gregory
    Chancellor, Rebecca
    Cohen, Heather
    Coupland, Charlotte
    Danquah, Emmanuel
    Deschner, Tobias
    Diotoh, Orume
    Dowd, Dervla
    Dunn, Andrew
    Egbe, Villard Ebot
    Eshuis, Henk
    Fernandez, Rumen
    Ginath, Yisa
    Goedmakers, Annemarie
    Granjon, Anne-Céline
    Head, Josephine
    Hedwig, Daniela
    Hermans, Veerle
    Imong, Inaoyom
    Jeffery, Kathryn J.
    Jones, Sorrel
    Junker, Jessica
    Kadam, Parag
    Kambere, Mbangi
    Kambi, Mohamed
    Kienast, Ivonne
    Kujirakwinja, Deo
    Langergraber, Kevin
    Lapuente, Juan
    Larson, Bradley
    Lee, Kevin
    Leinert, Vera
    Llana, Manuel
    Maretti, Giovanna
    Marrocoli, Sergio
    Mbi, Tanyi Julius
    Meier, Amelia C.
    Morgan, Bethan J.
    Morgan, David
    Mulindahabi, Felix
    Murai, Mizuki
    Neil, Emily
    Niyigaba, Protais
    Ormsby, Lucy Jayne
    Pacheco, Liliana
    Piel, Alex
    Preece, Jodie
    Regnaut, Sebastien
    Rundus, Aaron
    Sanz, Crickette
    Schijndel, Joost van
    Sommer, Volker
    Stewart, Fiona
    Tagg, Nikki
    Vendras, Elleni
    Vergnes, Virginie
    Welsh, Adam
    Wessling, Erin G.
    Willie, Jacob
    Wittig, Roman M.
    Yurkiw, Kyle
    Zuberbuehler, Klaus
    Kalan, Ammie K.
    Show allShow less
    Subject
    CHIMPANZEES
    ANIMAL-HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS
    AFRICA
    BEHAVIOR
    Journal title
    Science
    Volume
    363
    Issue
    6434
    Begin page
    1453
    End page
    1455
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1126/science.aau4532
    Alternative link
    http://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2019/03/06/science.aau4532
    Abstract
    Chimpanzees possess a large number of behavioral and cultural traits among non-human species. The ‘disturbance hypothesis’ predicts that human impact depletes resources and disrupts social learning processes necessary for behavioral and cultural transmission....
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12634/23
    Type
    Article
    Rights
    Copyright © 2019, American Association for the Advancement of Science
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1126/science.aau4532
    Scopus Count
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    Conservation Science Publications

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