Not exact matches
«We were able to show clever lemurs — some of our earliest primate relatives — increasing their social centrality as the result of their problem - solving,» said Daniel Rubenstein, Princeton's Class of 1877 Professor of Zoology and a professor of
ecology and evolutionary biology and the
lead author on the April 5 paper
in the
journal Current Biology.
John Hargrove, a doctoral student
in UF's wildlife
ecology and conservation department, is the
lead author on the study, published online June 5
in the
journal PLOS ONE.
The team's findings were published Feb. 1
in Applied and Environmental Microbiology — a
leading journal, covering topics
in biotechnology, microbial
ecology, food microbiology and industrial microbiology.
An international team
led by William Ripple, distinguished professor of
ecology at Oregon State University, analyzed data on the IUCN Red List to reach their findings, which were published today
in Royal Society Open Science, a professional
journal.