
Amanda H. KorstjensBournemouth University | BU · Life and Environmental Sciences
Amanda H. Korstjens
Professor
Professor in Behavioural Ecology at Bournemouth University
About
69
Publications
23,107
Reads
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2,938
Citations
Citations since 2017
Introduction
I'm a Behavioural Ecologist mostly studying primates but interested in all tropical mammals. I've worked in Indonesia, Ivory Coast, Uganda, The Gambia, and Cost-Rica.
I now lead the interdisciplinary collaborative programme LEAP: Landscape Ecology and Primatology. See: http://go-leap.wix.com/home
We are always looking for students to join us on Bournemouth University's MRes degree or postdocs to write grant proposals with.
Additional affiliations
January 2014 - present
LEAP: Landscape Ecology and Primatology
Position
- Project Manager
January 2007 - December 2010
October 2006 - present
Education
December 1996 - June 2001
Max Planck Institute Seewiesen and Utrecht University
Field of study
- Biology
September 1989 - November 1996
Publications
Publications (69)
Sleeping tree selection and related behaviours of a family group and a solitary female siamang (Symphalangus syndactylus) were investigated over a 5-month period in northern Sumatra, Indonesia. We performed all day follows, sleeping tree surveys and forest plot enumerations in the field. We tested whether: (1) physical characteristics of sleeping t...
Primates are sometimes categorized in terms of their habitat. Although such categorization can be oversimplistic, there are scientific benefits from the clarity and consistency that habitat categorization can bring. Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) inhabit various environments, but researchers often refer to “forest” or “savanna” chimpanzees. Despite...
Primate Research and Conservation in the Anthropocene - edited by Alison M. Behie January 2019
Non-human primates (hereafter primates) are becoming ever more threatened primarily due to habitat loss and
hunting but both threats are exacerbated by climate change. How primate species will respond to multi-level
changes to their environment depends on the type of changes they face as well as each species’ biology. Primates are considered partic...
Climate change will be a key influence on primates in the twenty-first century, potentially exacerbating the effects of habitat loss and anthropogenic activities to drive vulnerable species closer to extinction. There are many ways to assess species’ vulnerability to climate change, including modelling approaches of three main types: trait-based mo...
Ecosystems around the globe are facing irreversible impacts due to climate change, habitat destruction, hunting, and an ever‐increasing human population. Estimating densities of species across their geographical range helps us to understand natural variation and anthropogenic effects on species densities and to assess the effectiveness of existing...
Climate change is predicted to cause widespread disruptions to global biodiversity. Most climate models are at the macroscale, operating at a ~ 1 km resolution and predicting future temperatures at 1.5-2 m above ground level, making them unable to predict microclimates at the scale that many organisms experience temperature. We studied the effects...
The transformation and depletion of primary forest over the past few decades have placed almost half of the world's primate species under the threat of extinction. Developing any successful conservation program for primates requires distribution and demography data, as well as an understanding of the relationships between these factors and their ha...
The Colobines are a group of Afroeurasian monkeys that exhibit extraordinary behavioural and ecological diversity. With long tails and diverse colourations, they are medium-sized primates, mostly arboreal, that are found in many different habitats, from rain forests and mountain forests to mangroves and savannah. Over the last two decades, our unde...
This chapter reviews current knowledge of the red colobus, Piliocolobus, a polytypic widespread colobine living in sub-Saharan African forests, woodlands, mangroves, and riparian forests. The taxonomy of Piliocolobus has undergone many changes and is still unresolved, resulting in confusion and possibly hindering conservation efforts. Red colobus i...
Concern is growing about ecosystem collapse, namely the abrupt decline or loss of an ecosystem resulting from human activities. While efforts to assess the risk of ecosystem collapse have developed at large spatial scales, less attention has been given to the local scales at which conservation management decisions are typically made. Development of...
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) are the only great apes that inhabit hot, dry, and open savannas. We review the environmental pressures of savannas on chimpanzees, such as food and water scarcity, and the evidence for chimpanzees' behavioral responses to these landscapes. In our analysis, savannas were generally associated with low chimpanzee populat...
Understanding the neutral, biological, and environmental processes driving species distributions is valuable in informing conservation efforts because it will help us predict how species will respond to changes in environmental conditions. Environmental processes affect species differently according to their biological traits, which determine how t...
Forest structure, defined as the three-dimensional vertical and horizontal distribution of canopy vegetation, has a great influence on the distribution patterns and abundance of forest primates. The complexity of this structural canopy produces a diverse range of microhabitats and distinct ecological niches, allowing ecologically similar species to...
A participatory monitoring programme of an exceptional modification of urban soundscapes during Covid-19 containment.
Cambridge Core - Ecology and Conservation - Primate Research and Conservation in the Anthropocene - edited by Alison M. Behie
We develop a time budget model for the hylobatid family with the aim of assessing the extent to which their contemporary and historical biogeographic distributions might be explained by ecological constraints. The model uses local climate to predict time budgets, and from this the limiting size of social group that animals could manage at a given l...
Aim
In this study, we conduct a quantitative meta‐analysis to investigate broad patterns of genetic variation throughout large geographical regions in order to elucidate concordant geographical patterns across species and identify common historical processes to better inform the “cryptic refugia” versus the traditional “southern refugia” hypothesis...
Tropical rainforests support a large proportion of the Earth’s plant and animal species within a restricted global distribution, and play an important role in regulating the Earth’s climate. However, the existing knowledge of forest types or habitats is relatively poor and there are large uncertainties in the quantification of carbon stock in these...
To understand how species will respond to environmental changes, it is important to know how those changes will affect the ecological stress that animals experience. Time constraints can be used as indicators of ecological stress. Here we test whether time constraints can help us understand group sizes, distribution patterns, and community sizes of...
Emergent trees, which are taller than surrounding trees with exposed crowns, provide crucial services to several
rainforest species especially to endangered primates such as gibbons and siamangs (Hylobatidae). Hylobatids
show a preference for emergent trees as sleeping sites and for vocal displays, however, they are under threat
from both habitat m...
Tree or canopy height is an important attribute for carbon stock estimation, forest management and habitat quality assessment. Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) based on Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) has advantages over other remote sensing techniques for describing the structure of forests. However, sloped terrain can be challenging for accurate...
Most ecological studies of the effects of climate on species are based on average conditions
above ground level (measured by meteorological stations) averaged across 100 km2
or larger areas. However, most terrestrial organisms experience conditions in a much
smaller area at the ground surface or within vegetation canopies, the climate of which
can...
Mapping and monitoring tropical rainforests and quantifying their carbon stocks are important, both for devising strategies for their conservation and mitigating the effects of climate change. Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) has advantages over other remote sensing techniques for describing the three-dimensional structure of forests. This study ident...
The aim of this study was to identify forest patches based on structural composition using airborne laser scanner data in a tropical rainforest in Sumatra, Indonesia. The objectives were to estimate the locations and attributes of single trees based on a canopy height model, and to group the single trees based on their structural attributes into fo...
Forensic investigations involving animal scavenging of human remains require a physical search of the scene and surrounding areas. However, there is currently no standard procedure in the U.K. for physical searches of scavenged human remains. The Winthrop and grid search methods used by police specialist searchers for scavenged remains were examine...
Scavenger-induced alteration to bone occurs while scavengers access soft tissue and during the scattering and re-scavenging of skeletal remains. Using bite mark, dimensional data to assist in the more accurate identification of a scavenger can improve interpretations of trauma and enhance search and recovery methods. This study analyzed bite marks...
Like most arboreal primates, red colobus monkeys obtain most water from
plants in their diet, licking their body or drinking occasionally from
standing water in tree holes. Terrestrial drinking is not normally reported
for arboreal primates. Here we report observations of terrestrial drinking
from man-made watering holes by Temminck's red colobus (...
Within Northwest Europe, especially the U.K., the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and the Eurasian
Badger (Meles meles) are the largest wild scavengers capable of modifying a set of remains through scavenging. Knowledge of region-specific and species-typical scavenging behaviors of scavengers within the crime scene area and surroundings can aid in more ef...
Vertebrate scavengers can modify surface deposited human remains which can hinder
forensic investigations. The effects of such scavenging vary between species and regions.
Published research into the effects of the scavenging of human remains is dominated by
work from North America with few studies covering Northwestern Europe. Forensic
investi...
Physical search methods used by police specialist searchers are based on counter-terrorism methods and not on the search and
recovery of outdoor surface deposited human remains, nevertheless these methods are applied to scenes involving human remains.
Additionally, there is limited published forensic literature within Northwestern Europe on the pot...
Aim In this study we use a modelling approach to identify: (1) the factors responsible for the differences in ape biogeography, (2) the effects that global warming might have on distribution patterns of African apes, (3) the underlying mechanisms for these effects, and (4) the implications that behavioural flexibility might be expected to have for...
Time constraints can limit an animal's potential to survive in a given habitat and the maximum size of its group. Many studies have, therefore, investigated the ecological correlates of time allocated to travelling, foraging and vigilance. However, animals spend more time inactive than active, and understanding the determinants of this resting time...
Conventional approaches to population biology emphasise the roles of climatic conditions, nutrient flow and predation as constraints on population dynamics. We argue here that this focus has obscured the role of time as a crucial constraint on species' abilities to survive in some habitats. Time constraints may be particularly intrusive both for sp...
ole of kinship in primate societies;
genetic success of individual - measured by individual's own survival and reproduction;
cooperation in predator defence;
cooperation in intra-group competition;
primate females - likely to cooperate when contest competition over food is strong;
cooperation in raising offspring;
inbreeding - breeding between clos...
The adjustment to deal with intragroup food competition is probably the most plausible explanation of high levels of fission–fusion
dynamics. However, studies did not always support expected relations between food availability, ranging costs, and subgroup
size. We used several levels of analysis differing in the time and spatial scale in order to i...
We use data from 20 chimpanzee, bonobo and gorilla study sites to develop an African great ape time budgets model to predict the animals' capacity to survive in a range of habitats across sub-Saharan Africa. The model uses body mass and climatic data to predict the time animals must allocate to key activities (feeding, moving, resting and social in...
Nineteen scientists from different disciplines collaborated in highlighting new methodological and theoretical aspects in the re-emerging study area of fission-fusion dynamics. The renewed interest in this area is due to the recognition that such dynamics may create unique challenges for social interaction and distinctive selective pressures acting...
Scramble competition is related to animals depleting resources before others can use them, whereas contest competition is associated with the monopolization of resources and food-related aggression. One hypothesized major benefit of fission-fusion sociality is the reduction of scramble feeding competition between community members. We studied intra...
Question: Do individual time budgets constrain a species' biogeographical distribution and group size? Data studied: We used published data on gorilla behaviour and ecology as well as published climate variables to model their spatial distribution across Africa. Method: We develop a mathematical model, based on the assumption that time is a fundame...
Most primates live in social groups in which affiliative bonds exist between individuals. Because these bonds need to be maintained through social interactions (grooming in most primates), sociality will be limited by time constraints. It has previously been shown that the time primates invest in grooming increases with group size. However, when gr...
Researchers have shown that, in frugivorous primates, a major constraint on group size is intra group feeding competition.
The relationship is less obvious in folivorous primates. We investigated whether colobine group sizes are constrained by time
limitations as a result of their low energy diet and ruminant-like digestive system. We used climate...
Life history data from wild primate populations are necessary to explain variation in primate social systems and explain differences between primates and other mammals. Here we report life history data from a 12.5-year study on wild Thomas langurs. Mean age at first reproduction was 5.4 years and the sex ratio at birth was even. The mean interbirth...
Conclusion
1. Intra-group contest competition over food was highest in black-and-white colobus. This was also the species that selected the most contestable food items as measured from handling time, food spot residence time, percentage fruit in the diet, and food density. Thus, our results support the notion that contestable food items evoke conte...
An animal can only survive in a given habitat if it has enough time to find, process and digest food whilst avoiding predation. The time it has for food acquisition is affected by the vegetation and competition with conspecifics, which depends on aggregation tendencies. We used the relationships between time allocations, on the one hand, and climat...
Fission–fusion social systems, in which members of a social community form frequently changing subgroups, occur in a number
of mammalian taxa. Such systems are assumed to be a response to the costs of grouping, but evidence to support this hypothesis
is limited. We use a linear programming approach to build a time budget model that predicts the upp...
We investigated patterns of intergroup relationships in western black-and-white colobus, Colobus polykomos, in Taï National Park, Côte d'Ivoire, between 1993 and 1999. They live in one-male multifemale units, and demonstrate male
dispersal and occasional dispersal by females. Solitary males and all-male bands are absent or very rare. Our aim was to...
In the olive colobus (Procolobus verus), many groups have multiple males and the males have large testes. This indicates that even though this species lives in small groups, single males do not monopolize the groups. We investigated the strategies employed by males to secure their mating success, and sought to determine whether the lack of male mon...
In Primates, females are more likely to be philopatric than males. However, in some species like Procolobus verus, females or individuals of both sexes disperse. In Taï National Park, Ivory Coast, olive colobus groups are small, with one or two adult males and ≤6 females. Dispersal is common for juveniles and adults of both sexes. Adult male disper...
Socio-ecological theories predict that females adapt their social behaviour to their environment. On the other hand, as a result of phylogenetic inertia, social behaviour may be slow to catch up when the environment changes. If social behaviour is adapted to the environment, competition and co-operation among females is predicted to reflect the cha...
Socio-ecological theories predict that females adapt their social behaviour to their environment. On the other hand, as a result of phylogenetic inertia, social behaviour may be slow to catch up when the environment changes. If social behaviour is adapted to the environment, competition and co-operation among females is predicted to reflect the cha...
Male primates, carnivores and rodents sometimes kill infants that they did not sire. Infanticide by males is a relatively common phenomenon in these groups, but tends to be rare in any given species. Is this behavior pathological or accidental, or does it reflect a conditional reproductive strategy for males in certain circumstances? In this book,...
Questions
Question (1)
We are looking at locomotion type and African primate distribution and want to include humerofemoral index. Would you know where to find such data for a wide range of African catarrhine primate species?
Projects
Projects (8)
Integration of innovative remote sensing techniques for optimum modelling of tropical forest primate habitat and carbon storage
(This project received funding through EU Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (H2020-MSCA-IF-2014) under grant agreement no [657607], and was part of the LEAP (Landscape Ecology and Primatology) project at Bournemouth University)
To form an international network of microclimate researchers, to facilitate collaboration and find potential patterns in microclimates, allowing them and their potential as microrefuges to be quantified and modeled for a wide range of biomes and environmental conditions.