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.Mills, Causes and Consequences of Mate Fidelity in Red-Billed Gulls, pp.286 304 in Black 1996.291 at the breeding ground? Tony D.Williams, Mate Fidelity in Penguins, pp.269 285 in Black 1996.370 Notes-291 attracted to actual dotards.Avital & Jablonka 2000.291 with an older bird.I.Newton and I.Wylie, Monogamy in theSparrowhawk, pp.249 267 in Black 1996.291 and tattered ears.Goodall 1986.291 approached the older female.Cited in Goodall 1986.292 started their own families.Komdeur 1996.292 some they do not.Marzluff & Balda 1992.292 leave all child care to the mother.Wang & Insel 1996.293 coaching, and active teaching.Caro & Hauser 1992.295 the infant s mental state.Maestripieri 1995.295 infants to crawl and walk.Ibid.295 put a lot of time into it.Katharine Milton, Foraging Behaviour and theEvolution of Primate Intelligence, pp.285 305 in Byrne & Whiten 1988.295 orphaned pallid bats one year.Patricia Winters, personal communication.296 followed by their cubs.Barrie K.Gilbert, Opportunities for Social Learning inBears, pp.225 235 in Box & Gibson 1999; Bailey & Faust 1984.296 in the dusky wood rat.Burton 1956.297 may nip them on the nose.Liers 1951.297 reason for this caution.Reiss 1991.297 this dangerous activity.Goodall 1986; Charles H.Janson and Carel P.vanSchaik, Ecological Risk Aversion in Juvenile Primates: Slow and Steady Winsthe Race, pp.57 74 in Pereira & Fairbanks 1993.297 parents wherever they go.Lorenz 1978.297 very little direct instruction.Thomas Wynn, Layers of Thinking in ToolBehavior, pp.389 406 in Gibson & Ingold 1993.298 facilitation, and active teaching.Christophe Boesch, Aspects of Transmissionof Tool-Use in Wild Chimpanzees, pp.171 183 in Gibson & Ingold 1993.299 both animals and man. Avital & Jablonka 2000.299 in the Maine woods.Heinrich 1999.300 raised a family of chicks.Avital & Jablonka 2000.300 father stays with them.Jan A.J.Nel, Social Learning in Canids: AnEcological Perspective, pp.259 278 in Box & Gibson 1999.300 earthworms are a big food item.Macdonald 1987.301 elephant seal pups.Guinet 1991; Guinet & Bouvier 1995.302 the coast of Patagonia.Lopez & Lopez 1985.302 giving them fish.Ashmole & Tovar S.1968.302 of osprey school.Meinertzhagen 1954.303 more skilled parrot Alex.Irene Maxine Pepperberg, Social Influences on theAcquisition of Human-Based Codes in Parrots and Nonhuman Primates, pp.157 177, in Snowdon & Hausberger 1997.304 Often she ll walk away. Patterson & Linden 1981.304 and contraband shellfish.Examples of most of these are given in Weisbord &Kachanoff 2000304 stored drug samples in.Derr 2002.304 herd trout into a net.O Neill 2001.Notes 371-305 sharks on command.Irvine et al.1973.306 catch it and kill it. McKeever 1994.307 using conditioning techniques.Reiss 1991; Linden 2002.308 tricks he did on request.Kipps 1953.308 she handled him perfectly.Shumaker 1993.309 Mouila, became pregnant.Mager 1981.309 in the Kasekala troop.Goodall 1986.CHAP TER TEN: WHAT LEARNINGTELLS US ABOUT INTELLIGENCEPage311 cracks and dead wood.Hunt 1996.311 right tool for the job.Weir et al.2002; Schmid 2002.312 human average is 100).Patterson & Linden 1981.312 where the toy had fallen.Penny Patterson, panel discussion, Chimpanzoo 2002conference.312 on intelligence tests, James L.Gould, Can Honey Bees Create CognitiveMaps? pp.41 45 in Bekoff et al.2002.312 were equally accurate.Hollard & Delius 1982.313 that has gotten stuck.Locke 1954.313 they are safe from foxes.Lorenz 1978.314 getting a fish reward.Pryor 1975.314 we see as intelligent. ) Byrne 1995.314 as well as species-specific.Sue Taylor Parker and Patricia Poti, The Role of InnateMotor Patterns in Ontogenetic and Experiential Development of Intelligent Useof Sticks in Cebus Monkeys, pp.219 243 in Parker & Gibson 1990.315 in order to survive. Byrne 1995.315 flecks of suet to eat.Heinrich 1999.316 seen string in their lives.Heinrich 1995.316 and the plain titmouse.Millikan & Bowman 1967.317 floor of his tall cage.Thomas 2000.317 with a conical roof.Pryor 1975.317 How are they smart? Smolker 2001.317 keep things tidy. Yoerg 2001.318 never find them again.Russell P.Balda and Alan C.Kamil, Spatial and SocialCognition in Corvids: An Evolutionary Approach, pp.128 134 in Bekoff etal.2002.318 Sara Shettleworth writes.Sara J.Shettleworth, Spatial Behavior, Food Storing,and the Modular Mind, pp.123 128 in Bekoff et al.2002.318 much else about snakes.Cheney & Seyfarth 1985.318 a win-stay strategy.Alan C.Kamil, Adaptation and Cognition: KnowingWhat Comes Naturally, pp.533 544 in Roitblat et al.1984.319 a spider-eating spider.Jackson & Pollard 2001.372 Notes-319 a larger tray of water.Jackson et al.2001.320 minority group among spiders. Avital & Jablonka 2000.320 predicting their behavior. Hauser 2000.320 African grey parrots.Pepperberg 1999.321 in favor of another.Cited in Hauser 2000.321 322 the sensorimotor period.Redshaw 1978.322 counting, and subitization.Robert Shumaker, Numerical Competence inOrangutans (Pongo pygmaeus), presentation at Chimpanzoo 2002 conference.322 two apes, Sarah and Sheba.Sarah T.Boysen, More Is Less : The Elicitation ofRule-Governed Resource Distribution in Chimpanzees, pp.177 189 inRusson et al.1996.323 at the National Zoo.Robert Shumaker, Numerical Competence inOrangutans (Pongo pygmaeus), presentation at Chimpanzoo 2002 conference.324 animal behavior research).P.J.Asquith, Anthropomorphism and the Japaneseand Western Traditions in Primatology, pp.61 71 in Else & Lee 1986.324 variation in octopuses.Sinn et al.2001.324 the raccoon s personality.Davis 1984.325 to open water.Reebs 2001; Aronson 1971.325 later when they migrated.Hauser 2000.325 analyzing their reactions.Glickman & Sroges 1966.326 with one difference.Wemelsfelder et al.2000.326 collars with transponders.Donald M.Broom, Social Transfer of Informationin Domestic Animals, pp.158 168 in Box & Gibson 1999.327 where nothing ever happened.Bradburn Young, personal communication.327 like that of other animals.Markowitz et al.1975.328 riverbed in Stink Wadi.Sigg 1980.328 they do with their striatum.Pepperberg 1999.328 cortical neurons differently.Smolker 2001.329 and that takes brains.K.R.Gibson, Cognition, Brain Size and the Extractionof Embedded Food Resources, pp.93 103 in Else & Lee 1986.329 living in the same area.Katharine Milton, Foraging Behaviour and theEvolution of Primate Intelligence, pp.285 305 in Byrne & Whiten 1988.330 problems were social problems.Cited in Alain Schmitt and Karl Grammer, Social Intelligence and Success: Don t Be Too Clever in Order to Be Smart,pp.86 111 in Whiten & Byrne 1997.330 bonding power of grooming.Dunbar 1996.330 and uttering alarm calls.Sue Savage-Rumbaugh and Kelly McDonald, Deception and Social Manipulation in Symbol-Using Apes, pp.224 237 inByrne & Whiten 1988.331 dominant to older males.Barbara Smuts, Gestural Communication in OliveBaboons and Domestic Dogs, pp.301 306 in Bekoff et al.2002.331 opaque upside-down test tube.Giraldeau & Lefebvre 1987.332 small children played together.Cited in Christopher Boehm, Pacifying Interven-tions at Arnhem Zoo and Gombe, pp.211 226 in Wrangham et al.1994.Notes 373-332 writes Alison Jolly.Alison Jolly, Lemur Social Behaviour and PrimateIntelligence pp.27 33 in Byrne & Whiten 1988.332 humans to solve her problems.Juan Carlos Gómez, The Emergence ofIntentional Communication as a Problem-Solving Strategy in the Gorilla, pp.333 355 in Parker & Gibson 1990.332 three or more individuals. Sue Savage-Rumbaugh, Mary Ann Romski,William D.Hopkins, and Rose A.Sevcik, Symbol Acquisition and Use byPan troglodytes, Pan paniscus, Homo sapiens, pp.266 295 in Heltne &Marquardt 1989.332 ignore that vervet s wrr.Robert M.Seyfarth & Dorothy L
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