Colin A. Chapman has conducted field work in the Caribbean and Costa Rica, and now has established a long-term research program in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Trained in both anthropology and zoology, his research focuses on attempts to understand what determines the abundance of primates in a variety of natural and human-modified settings and the impact of primate loss. Having examined nutritional constraints on primate populations, he is now turning to the examination of whether dietary stress adversely affects resistance to parasitic infection by reducing the effectiveness of the immune system. If this occurs, nutritional status and parasitism could have synergistic effects on the host; that is, the individual effects of each factor would be amplified when co-occurring.
Articles
Primates and the Ecology of their Infectious Diseases: How will Anthropogenic Change Affect Host-Parasite Interactions?
Article first published online: 25 AUG 2005
DOI: 10.1002/evan.20068
Copyright © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Issue

Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews
Volume 14, Issue 4, pages 134–144, July/August 2005
Additional Information
How to Cite
Chapman, C. A., Gillespie, T. R. and Goldberg, T. L. (2005), Primates and the Ecology of their Infectious Diseases: How will Anthropogenic Change Affect Host-Parasite Interactions?. Evol. Anthropol., 14: 134–144. doi: 10.1002/evan.20068
Publication History
- Issue published online: 25 AUG 2005
- Article first published online: 25 AUG 2005
Funded by
- Wildlife Conservation Society
- National Science Foundation (USA)
- Morris Animal Foundation
- National Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC, Canada)
- National Center for Environmental Research of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- Morris Animal Foundation
- William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
- University of Illinois Office of International Studies
Options for accessing this content:
- If you have access to this content through a society membership, please first log in to your society website.
- If you would like institutional access to this content, please recommend the title to your librarian.
- Login via Athens http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/athens or other institutional login options http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/login-options .
- You can purchase online access to this Article for a 24-hour period (price varies by title)
- If you already have a Wiley Online Library or Wiley InterScience user account: login above and proceed to purchase the article.
- New Users: Please register, then proceed to purchase the article.
Registered Users please login:
- Access your saved publications, articles and searches
- Manage your email alerts, orders and subscriptions
- Change your contact information, including your password
Please register to:
- Save publications, articles and searches
- Get email alerts
- Get all the benefits mentioned below!

1520-6505/asset/EVAN_centre.gif?v=1&s=7c86407828b70a9f742a640e3c04352901f9cb62)