In publica commoda

Veranstaltung

Public Opening Lecture - Symposium Frontiers in Baboon Research: Adding the fourth dimension (by Clifford J. Jolly, New York University)

Titel der Veranstaltung Public Opening Lecture - Symposium Frontiers in Baboon Research: Adding the fourth dimension (by Clifford J. Jolly, New York University)
Veranstalter Deutsches Primatenzentrum
Referent/in Prof. Dr. Clifford J. Jolly
Einrichtung Referent/in New York University, Department of Anthropology
Veranstaltungsart Vortrag
Kategorie Forschung
Anmeldung erforderlich Nein
Beschreibung Adding the fourth dimension

Clifford J. Jolly
*Department of Anthropology, New York University

A biological conference focusing on a single taxon is unusual, but baboons (Papio, Theropithecus, and their close, extinct relatives) are particularly appropriate for such treatment. Their evolutionary biology has been studied from viewpoints ranging from social behavior, neurophysiology and ecology to paleontology, genetics and phylogeography, and they are among the very few large African mammals whose natural distribution is still relatively well represented by wild populations. Furthermore, parallels in the geographical, chronological and ecological context of baboon and hominin evolution can provide analogies for understanding human and pre-human diversity. The past few decades have seen a major expansion of baboon research, including, in particular, more comprehensive on-the-ground surveys, and the application of new tools to record behavior in the field and to generate and analyze genetic, epigenetic, genomic and physiological data from wild and captive populations. The resultant findings have led to a fuller appreciation of the diversity of baboon populations and taxa. The skin-and-skull features traditionally used to distinguish major taxa (whether called species or subspecies) have been supplemented with evidence for genetic, physiological and behavioral variation that seems (from admittedly inadequate data) to be equally taxon-specific. Some inter-populational differences, especially in easily modifiable, "plastic" traits such as foraging group size, can be explained in terms of the conventional, default, a-historical paradigm in which extant ecological factors are paramount. But many taxon-specific traits with a stronger genetic basis, such as overall body size, are not adequately explained by the default paradigm alone. Though it inevitably complicates the picture, it seems that an historical dimension is essential. The dense genetic information now emerging confirms the view that baboons do indeed have a complex phylogeographic history. The fossils indicate that early Papio baboons very similar to extant species belonged to a terrestrial primate guild quite different from today's. Extant baboon genomes attest to a subsequent history of range expansions and contractions, presumably climate-driven, and a succession of differentiation ("incomplete speciation") events, complicated by episodes of localized interspecific gene-flow and population fusion. Inevitably, the population-associated characteristics we see today must reflect these complicated, idiosyncratic, histories of phylogeny and demography. Incorporating the historical dimension should explain extant diversity more completely than is possible under the simpler, a-historical, spread-and-adapt paradigm alone. Explaining each population's traits as the product of a unique history, however, can result in untestable Just So stories. One strategy is to construct historical scenarios that gain plausibility because composed of elements derived from well-established, law-like regularities or supported by strong predictive models. As an example, I here suggest how historical and demographic factors, along with ecological effects, can be invoked to attack a problem that has no ready explanation within the conventional socioecological paradigm, namely: why do norms of male behavior -- especially dispersal from the natal group -- differ so strongly among extant baboon taxa?


Lecture hall, German Primate Center, Kellnerweg 4, Göttingen
Zeit Beginn: 17.10.2017, 17:00 Uhr
Ende: 17.10.2017 , 18:15 Uhr
Ort Deutsches Primatenzentrum (Kellnerweg 4)
Lecture hall
Kontakt 0551 3851218
rjuergens@dpz.eu