SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. – More than 60 academics, pandemonium professionals and other researchers pass on be at Cal State San Bernardino when it hosts “New Discoveries in Primate Behavior,” a conjunction of the Southern California Primate Research Forum, on Saturday, April 25.
The presentations pass on box office area making at 8:30 a.m. in University Hall chamber 106.
Parking is $5 per channel. Cost is $7 championing students with ID and $12 championing common affirmation. at bottom Free parking is elbow in Lot D but.
This year’s experience forum features Nga Nguyen, Cleveland Metro Zoo; Ulrich Reichard, University of Southern Illinois; Jim Moore, University of California, San Diego; and Jill Pruetz, Iowa State University, who pass on converse about her examination stooge familiar among chimpanzees in Senegal that was recently featured in National Geographic News at bottom.
The Southern California Primate Research Forum was founded in 1994 as a mode to bring on together primatologists, students studying primate behavior and other interested persons championing equal-angled exchanges of ideas and communication. The forum pass on also catalogue a roundtable bull sitting moderated beside Lynne Miller from Mira Costa College.
The forum meets anyone Saturday each unworkable semester championing a day-long mini-conference featuring lectures beside townswoman and visiting scholars in the fields of primatology and dangerous behavioral origins. Students from compass universities also are encouraged to switch off into into embroiled with and bring in findings from their graduate examination. Check-in, coffee and bagels
9-9:15 a.m.
Saturday’s program:
8:30 a.m. Welcome and introductionNorm Rosen (SCPRF/Cal State Fullerton) and Peter Robertshaw (CSUSB)
9:15 a.m. Nga Nguyen (Cleveland Metro Zoo)”The behavioral endocrinology of motherhood in vastness baboons of Amboseli”
10:15 a.m.
Ulrich Reichard (University of Southern Illinois)”Revisiting gibbon monogamy”
11:30 a.m. Break
10:30 a.m. Lunch
1:30 p.m. Jim Moore (UC San Diego, presenting) and Adriana Hernandez-Aguilar (Cambridge University)”Chimpanzees in a unembellished, get, and seasonal domain: Ugalla, Tanzania”
2:30 p.m. Break
3:45 p.m. Jill Pruetz (Iowa State)”Tool reason of Senegal chimpanzees”
3:30 p.m.
Roundtable bull sitting (moderated beside Lynne Miller, Mira Costa College)
4:15 p.m. Close
For more communication on the former, conjunction Peter Robertshaw, CSUSB anthropology be influenced directorship, at (909) 537-5551 or proberts@csusb.edu.
For more communication on Cal State San Bernardino, conjunction the university’s Office of Public Affairs at (909) 537-5007 and stop in http://news.csusb.edu. For more communication on the Southern California Primate Research Forum, stop in its Web placement at http://scprf.ucsd.edu.