1999
DOI: 10.1007/bf02557562
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Vertical distribution of wild Yakushima macaques (Macaca fuscata yakui) in the western area of Yakushima Island, Japan: Preliminary report

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Cited by 34 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…5), although the 280 specimens were collected evenly in an attempt to fit the distribution of monkeys according to the group density reported by Yoshihiro et al (1998Yoshihiro et al ( , 1999. Y1 was distributed widely, as expected from the estimated frequency, whereas the other five haplotypes were observed only in restricted areas in the lowland forests.…”
Section: Geographically Biased Distributionmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…5), although the 280 specimens were collected evenly in an attempt to fit the distribution of monkeys according to the group density reported by Yoshihiro et al (1998Yoshihiro et al ( , 1999. Y1 was distributed widely, as expected from the estimated frequency, whereas the other five haplotypes were observed only in restricted areas in the lowland forests.…”
Section: Geographically Biased Distributionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The Yakushima macaque is distributed widely on the island, from subtropical broadleaf forest through cool temperate coniferous forest to subalpine grassland (Yoshihiro et al 1999). The population density ranges from 1.3 to 2.4 km À2 in response to the production of fruit in each altitudinal zone (Hanya et al 2004).…”
Section: Study Populationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of those that do speculate on environmental drivers of density, the majority only make qualitative comparisons among vegetation types or study sites (Freese et al 1982;Weisenseel et al 1993;White 1994;Yoshihiro et al 1999;Mathews and Matthews 2002;McConkey and Chivers 2004). Other studies examined vegetational correlates of primate abundance, such as tree density, basal area, shrub cover, and tree species diversity (Butynski 1990;Chapman and Chapman 1999;Balcomb et al 2000;Wieczkowski 2004;Worman and Chapman 2006;Hamard et al 2010).…”
Section: Previous Studies On Primate Abundancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…We expected larger troops to live in larger ranges at the high elevations at Yakushima, like Japanese macaques at Kinkazan, but found small groups and relatively high troop density (Hanya et al 2003;Yoshihiro et al 1999). In 1994, Yoshihiro et al (1999 implemented a new method for population censuses at higher elevations, dividing each research area into 500×500 m grid squares, with an observer positioned in each grid square at a fixed point. Three to 6 fixed observers formed a party together with a leader who tracked the macaques.…”
Section: Recent Scope Of Field Studies At Yakushimamentioning
confidence: 99%