But nearly 30 years of data
on wild baboons shows that top - ranking males, despite showing signs of increased stress, recover more quickly than low - ranking baboons from wounds and illness.
Not exact matches
The findings, appearing online Jan. 18 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, come from a long - term study of
wild baboons monitored
on a near - daily basis since 1971 at Amboseli.
Latest research
on social networks in
wild baboon troops has revealed how the animals get information from each other
on the whereabouts of food.
I am currently focusing
on female reproductive competition and
on sexual conflict between males and females in a
wild population of chacma
baboon living in Namibia.
From the gorgeous gelada
baboons living
on Ethiopia's plateaus to cheetahs in Namibia, and of course an African safari to see the Big 5, Africa's
wilds are without a doubt my number one dream destination.