A preliminary field study was conducted on moustached tamarin monkeys (Saguinus mystax) inhabiting Padre Isla, a small island in the Amazon Basin of northeastern Peru. Data presented indicate that groups are generally composed of 3-8 individuals including a single breeding female, 1-3 reproductively active males, nonreproductive adult females, and offspring. Migration of adults and subadults into and out of established groups is common, and it is unlikely that S. mystax social units represent nuclear or extended families. It is argued that rather than tending towards monogamy, the reproductive biology and mating activities of moustached tamarins are better understood in terms of a communal breeding system. In the case of this and perhaps other callitrichid species, such a system appears to involve female promiscuity and the participation of reproductively active adult male group members in caring for the young. The hypothesis that there is an important relationship between the number of adult male ‘helpers’ and infant survival is discussed.
QuestionsSpatial pattern analysis may be used to derive hypotheses on the processes that shape plant communities. Do different mature semidesert communities exhibit the same major spatial patterns, suggesting that similar processes shape them?LocationNine localities in the Bolivian Andes.MethodsWe mapped all woody individuals at each locality. We performed uni‐, bi‐, and multivariate spatial analyses of nine Andean, mature semiarid plant communities to test for similarity in spatial patterns.ResultsWe found that the nine communities exhibited, in most of the main spatial pattern attributes, close similarities (community aggregation, importance of plant interactions, life form differences, etc.). Some peculiarities were likely due to differences in life form or site history.ConclusionsAt least for Andean semiarid communities, the complete analysis of a representative plot conveys reliable information on spatial relationships and, hence, on potential underlying mechanisms. This shows that the use of 1–2 representative plots can be used to extrapolate to similar communities within a given region. Our results can be used as a plausible hypothesis to be tested in other zones of the planet.
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