Colin A. Chapman - McGill University · C.A. Chapman 1 Colin A. Chapman Canada Research Chair,...

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C.A. Chapman 1 Colin A. Chapman Canada Research Chair, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Killam Research Fellow February 2014 Address: Anthropology Department and McGill School of Environment, 855 Sherbrooke St West, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 2T7 Tel 514-398-1242, Cell: 514-378-5596, Fax 514-398-1643, email: [email protected] http://chapmanresearch.mcgill.ca/ Academic Positions: Killam Research Fellow 2012-2015. Canadian Research Chair – Primate Ecology and Conservation, McGill University, Montreal, 2012 to present. Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, McGill University, Montreal, – 2010 to present Canadian Research Chair – Primate Ecology and Conservation, McGill University, Montreal, 2005 to 2011. Associate Member, Redpath Museum, McGill University, Montreal, 2008 to present. Associate Director of McGill School of Environment (Research), McGill University, Montreal, 2008 to present. Associate Director of McGill School of Environment (Undergraduate), McGill University, Montreal, 2006 – 2008. Professor, Anthropology Department and McGill School of Environment, McGill University, Montreal - 2004 to present. Associate Member, Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, 2004 to present. Associate Member, Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, 2004 to present. Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville - 2003 to 2004 Graduate Coordinator, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville – 2000 to 2003 Associate Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville - 1998 to 2003 Honourary Lecturer at the University of Hong Kong, China – 1998 to 2004 Assistant Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville - 1993 to 1998 Honourary Lecturer of Zoology at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda - 1990 to present Other Appointments: Expedition Committee Advisory Board of National Geographic – 2012 to present. Associate Member Centre d’esude de al foret – 2012 to present International Society of Primatology Conservation Committee – 2012 to present. Committee for the Centre for International Governance Innovation Committee for Research and Exploration at the National Geographic Society – 2008 – present Conservation Trust Advisory Board at the National Geographic Society – 2008 – present Buffett Award Advisory Board at the National Geographic Society – 2008- present Board of Directors and Founding Member of Kibale Health and Conservation Project – 2007 to present. Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation: Conservation Committee - 2004 to 2006 Primate Conservation Inc. Scientific Advisory Board - 2004 to present IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group - 1996 to present IUCN/SSC Antelope Specialist Group - 1996 to present Associate Scientist, Wildlife Conservation Society, New York – 1995 to present Education History: Research Associate the Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge Post-Doctoral Position (NSERC) at the Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada Ph.D. in Zoology and Anthropology Received at the University of Alberta in 1987 Thesis Title: Foraging Strategies, Patch Use, and Constraints on Group Size in Three Species of Costa Rican Primates Supervisors: Drs. Linda Fedigan and John Addicott Masters in Anthropology Received at the University of Alberta in 1983 Thesis Title: Behavioural Ecology of the St. Kitts Vervet Supervisor: Dr. Linda M. Fedigan B.Sc. (Honors) in Zoology Received at the University of Alberta in 1981 Editorial Service: Editorial Board for Taprobanica, Journal of Asian Biodiversity - 2012 to present Associate Editor of Animal Conservation 2010 to 2012 Associate Editor of International Journal of Primatology – 2008 to 2012 Editor of American Journal of Primatology – 2005 to 2008

Transcript of Colin A. Chapman - McGill University · C.A. Chapman 1 Colin A. Chapman Canada Research Chair,...

Page 1: Colin A. Chapman - McGill University · C.A. Chapman 1 Colin A. Chapman Canada Research Chair, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Killam Research Fellow February 2014 Address:

C.A. Chapman 1

Colin A. Chapman Canada Research Chair, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Killam Research Fellow

February 2014 Address: Anthropology Department and McGill School of Environment, 855 Sherbrooke St West, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 2T7 Tel 514-398-1242, Cell: 514-378-5596, Fax 514-398-1643, email: [email protected] http://chapmanresearch.mcgill.ca/ Academic Positions: Killam Research Fellow 2012-2015. Canadian Research Chair – Primate Ecology and Conservation, McGill University, Montreal, 2012 to present. Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, McGill University, Montreal, – 2010 to present Canadian Research Chair – Primate Ecology and Conservation, McGill University, Montreal, 2005 to 2011. Associate Member, Redpath Museum, McGill University, Montreal, 2008 to present. Associate Director of McGill School of Environment (Research), McGill University, Montreal, 2008 to present. Associate Director of McGill School of Environment (Undergraduate), McGill University, Montreal, 2006 – 2008. Professor, Anthropology Department and McGill School of Environment, McGill University, Montreal - 2004 to present. Associate Member, Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, 2004 to present. Associate Member, Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, 2004 to present. Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville - 2003 to 2004 Graduate Coordinator, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville – 2000 to 2003 Associate Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville - 1998 to 2003 Honourary Lecturer at the University of Hong Kong, China – 1998 to 2004 Assistant Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville - 1993 to 1998 Honourary Lecturer of Zoology at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda - 1990 to present Other Appointments: Expedition Committee Advisory Board of National Geographic – 2012 to present. Associate Member Centre d’esude de al foret – 2012 to present International Society of Primatology Conservation Committee – 2012 to present. Committee for the Centre for International Governance Innovation Committee for Research and Exploration at the National Geographic Society – 2008 – present Conservation Trust Advisory Board at the National Geographic Society – 2008 – present Buffett Award Advisory Board at the National Geographic Society – 2008- present Board of Directors and Founding Member of Kibale Health and Conservation Project – 2007 to present. Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation: Conservation Committee - 2004 to 2006 Primate Conservation Inc. Scientific Advisory Board - 2004 to present IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group - 1996 to present IUCN/SSC Antelope Specialist Group - 1996 to present Associate Scientist, Wildlife Conservation Society, New York – 1995 to present Education History: Research Associate the Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge Post-Doctoral Position (NSERC) at the Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada Ph.D. in Zoology and Anthropology Received at the University of Alberta in 1987 Thesis Title: Foraging Strategies, Patch Use, and Constraints on Group Size in Three Species of Costa Rican Primates Supervisors: Drs. Linda Fedigan and John Addicott Masters in Anthropology Received at the University of Alberta in 1983 Thesis Title: Behavioural Ecology of the St. Kitts Vervet Supervisor: Dr. Linda M. Fedigan B.Sc. (Honors) in Zoology Received at the University of Alberta in 1981 Editorial Service: Editorial Board for Taprobanica, Journal of Asian Biodiversity - 2012 to present Associate Editor of Animal Conservation 2010 to 2012 Associate Editor of International Journal of Primatology – 2008 to 2012 Editor of American Journal of Primatology – 2005 to 2008

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Editorial Board for International Journal of Primatology - 2002 to present Editorial Board for African Primates - 2002 to present Associate Editor for Primates – 2001 to 2013 Editorial Board for Biotropica – 2000 to 2006 Service to the College of University McGill University Provosts Working Group on the Environment - 2007 to present Undergraduate Advisory Committee (Chair), McGill School of Environment - 2006 to present Graduate Advisory Committee, McGill School of Environment 2006 to present Tenure and Promotion Board, Faculty of Science, McGill University 2006 to 2007 University of Florida African Studies: Carter Lecture Series African Studies: Curriculum Committee Center for Wetlands: Advisory Council Chair Search Committee College of Natural Resources and Environment: Graduate Program Committee Foreign Language Area Studies: Fellowships Committee Fulbright Committee International Studies: International Field Course Committee International Studies Committee Program in Studies of Tropical Conservation: Grant Review Committee Sigma Xi: Awards Committee (Chair) Sigma Xi: Awards Committee (Member) Udall Scholarship: Selection Committee Makerere University Compton Project: Advisory Committee Ford Foundation Committee Lake Nkuruba Conservation Committee Makerere University Biological Field Station: Table Makerere University Biological Field Station: Endowment Committee Research and Teaching Interests Primate Behavioral Ecology / Conservation Biology / Forest Regeneration Plant Phenology and Distributions / Plant Animal Interactions / Evolution of Social Systems and Group Size / Freshwater Fish Ecology Awards Received Gazette Newpaper Group 2012 – Most Cited Anthropologist in Canada Primates 2010 Most-Cited Paper Award Primates 2008 Most-Cited Paper Award University of Florida Research Foundation Professorship Award. Received March 2004. Term Professorship, University of Florida. Received December 2003. Anderson Teacher Scholar. Received September 2003. Senior Faculty Research Award University of Florida Chapter of Sigma Xi. Received April 2003. Junior Faculty Research Award University of Florida Chapter of Sigma Xi. Received April 1996. Private Donations to Conservation Total funds received over time from individuals and corporation to sponsor the conservation, health, research, and education work of Dr. Colin Chapman and Dr. Lauren Chapman. Total = $454,000 Grants and Fellowships Received Gate Foundation: Flip-Flops and holograms for disrupting helminth transmission. T.L. Goldberg, S. Paige, and C.A. Chapman.

November 2013. - Amount Received $113,000 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. January 2013. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$22,048 US. Grand Challenge, Stars in Global Health Program. Delivery of basic health care to rural areas surrounding national parks via mobile

clinics. C.A. Chapman. January 2013. – Amount Received $113,000. Wildlife Conservation Society. January 2013. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$22,000 US. Killam Research Fellowship. September 2012. Amount Received $140,000.

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NSERC: Research Tools and Instruments. April 2012. Four-wheel drive truck to access remote areas of Kibale National Park, Uganda. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received $53,076.

McGill School of Environment. January 2012. Zoonotic disease transmission among primates. C.A. Chapman and D.J. Marcogliese.

Amount Received $3000 QCBS Ecological and evolutionary perspectives on infectious disease threats to wildlife biodiversity in theory and practice. Fanie

Pelletier, Julien Mainguy, Dany Garant, Marco Festa-Bianchet, Colin Chapman, Sophie Calmé, Virginie Millien, and Eric Vander. Amount Received $20,000.

Wildlife Conservation Society. November 2011. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$22,000 US. Canadian Foundation of Innovation. Primate health lab: The addition of cross-scale research. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received

$284,423. QCBS Individualism vs. holism in non-speciesist ethics and law. G. Mikkelson and C. A. Chapman. Amount Received $5000. NSF (Geography). CNH-Ex: Hotter hotspots: Land-use intensification and protected-area vulnerability in Africa's Albertine Rift. August

2011. J. Hartter, C.A. Chapman, J.E. Diem, M. Palace, S.J. Ryan. Among Received $249,995 US NSF/NIH (Ecology of Infectious Diseases). Biological and human dimensions of primate retroviral transmission. April 2011. T.L.

Goldberg, C.A. Chapman, J.H. Jones, W.M. Switzer, and N. Ting. Amount Received $2,486,015 US. NSERC: Discovery Grant. May 2011. Applying spatial epidemiology and ecological models to understand the abundance and social

organization of folivorous primates. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received $270,000 over 5 years. FQRNT: May 2011. Understanding disease transmission dynamics: Using spatial epidemiology and agent-based modeling

approaches on two continents. C.A. Chapman, S. Calme, R Sengupta. Amount Received $148,500 over 3 years. Primate Conservation Inc. March 2011. Relocation of the primatology and wildlife research station in Balancan, Tabasco Mexico.

Juan Carlos Serio-Silva and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received $3000. McGill School of Environment. February 2011. The union of GIS and agent-based modeling to study the ecology of infectious

diseases. R. Sengupta, M. Kalacska, C.A. Chapman and R. Reyna-Hurtado. Amount received $3000 McGill School of Environment. February 2011. Zoonotic disease transmission among primates. C.A. Chapman and J. Davies.

Amount received $3000 Margo Marsh Conservation Fund. March 2010. Conservation and ecotourism. C.A. Chapman and K. Tombak. Amount Received

$5000. Wildlife Conservation Society. December 2010. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$22,000 US. Grey Gates Foundation: Kibale Health and Conservation Project: Enhancing outreach. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount

Received $3,000. NSERC: Research Tools and Instruments. April 2010. Using NIR rapid content analyser as a means of dealing with variation in the

nutritional value of primate diets. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received $90,975. Wildlife Conservation Society. December 2009. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$30,000 US. National Science Foundation. June 2009. Acquisition of a near infrared spectrometer to rapidly analyze primate diets Rothman J.M.

and C.A. Chapman. Major Research Instrumentation $432,981 US Wildlife Conservation Society. December 2008. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$30,000 US. National Geographic Society. December 2007. Does climate change have cascading effects on tree nutritional quality and primate

abundance? Amount Received $18,870 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. December 2007. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$30,000 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. December 2006. Conservation in Uganda. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Amount Received

$30,000 US. University of Wisconsin. September 2006. Nutritional ecology of primates. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received $10,000 US.

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NSERC, Received April 2006. Determinants of abundance and social organization in folivorous primates. C.A. Chapman. Amount

Received $235,500 over 5 years. SSHRC. Received March 2006, Strategic Research Cluster on Mind, Culture and Evolution. M. Collard et al. Amount Received

$24,520. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 2005. Renewal – Biodiversity in Uganda: Ecological Processes, Evolutionary

Mechanisms, and Capacity Building. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $14,000 US. NSERC: Received April 2005. Ecological Determinants of Abundance and Social Organization of Folivorous Primates. C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received $34,800. Canadian Foundation for Innovation. Received January 2005. Conserving Primates through Laboratory Assessment of Health. C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received $471,280. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 2004. Renewal – Biodiversity in Uganda: Ecological Processes, Evolutionary

Mechanisms, and Capacity Building. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $11,000 US. Morris Animal Fund. Received September 2004. Eco-epidemiology of Infectious Disease Transmission. T. Goldberg and Colin A.

Chapman. Amount Received $136,080 US. Conservation International. Received June 2004. Increased Connectivity in the Albertine Rift: The Kibale/Queen Elizabeth

Connection. A. Mugisha, C.A. Chapman, L. Chapman, D. Rice. A. Bruner. Planning Project. Amount Received $24,380 US. National Science Foundation. Received January 2004. Predictors of Primate Abundance: How Primates Respond to Stress. C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received $180,000 US. National Science Foundation. Received February 2004. Consequences of Parks for Land Use, Livelihood Diversification, and

Biodiversity in East Africa. A. Goldman, M. Binford, C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, J. Southworth, J. McCabe, and P. Leslie. Amount Received $299,981 US.

Leakey Foundation. Received January 2004. Do Nutrition, Parasitism, and Stress Operate Synergistically to Influence Colobus

Population Dynamics? C.A. Chapman. Amount Received $19,000 US. Environmental Protection Agency. Received September 2004. How Hunting May Affect Seed Dispersal Process and Forest

Dynamics. J Poulsen and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - ~$83,292 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 2003. Renewal – Biodiversity in Uganda: Ecological Processes, Evolutionary

Mechanisms, and Capacity Building. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $11,000 US. National Science Foundation Student Training Grant (IGERT). Received September 2002. Working Forests in the Tropics. D. Zarin

et al. Amount Received $2,330,689 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 2002. Renewal – Biodiversity in Uganda: Ecological Processes, Evolutionary

Mechanisms, and Capacity Building. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $11,000 US. Environmental Protection Agency. Received September 2001. Effects of Human Disturbance on Primate-Disease Dynamics. T.

Gillespie and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $83,292 US. National Science Foundation. Received April 2001. Nutritional Mechanisms of Population Regulation in Frugivorous Primates: The

effects of Logging on Redtail Monkeys in Kibale National Park, Uganda. K. Rode and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received – $12,000 US.

Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 2001. Renewal – Biodiversity in Uganda: Ecological Processes, Evolutionary

Mechanisms, and Capacity Building. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $11,000 US. Leakey Foundation. Received April 2001. Nutritional Determinants of Population Density in Redtail Monkeys. K. Rode and C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received - $12,000 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 2000. Renewal – Key Processes Maintaining Biodiversity and Capacity Building in

Kibale. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $10,000 US. National Science Foundation. Received February 2000. Determinants of Colobine Abundance: Implications for Theory and

Conservation. Amount Received - $172,847 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 1999. Renewal – Key Processes Maintaining Biodiversity and Capacity Building in

Kibale. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $10,000 US.

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Center for African Studies. Received July 1999. Environmental Conservation Science in Uganda. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $6000 US.

Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 1998. Renewal - Recovery of Plant and Animal Communities in the Kibale Corridor.

L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $10,000 US. Ford Foundation. Received August 1998. Integrating Indigenous African Knowledge, Rights, and Scientific Research in

Environmental Conservation. M. Chege, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, T. Crisman, A. Goldman, and H. Davis. Amount Received - $148,252 US.

CLAS Research Award - University of Florida. Received September 1998. Predicting the Abundance of Endangered Primates: A

Nutritional Ecology Approach. C. A. Chapman. Amount Received - $12,000 US. Beinecke Foundation, Wildlife Conservation Society. Received September 1998. Ugandan Student Support. L.J. Chapman and C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received - $41,500 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 1997. Renewal - Recovery of Plant and Animal Communities in the Kibale Corridor.

L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $10,000 US. National Science Foundation. Received December 1996. Constraints on Primate Group Size: Responses to Spatial and Temporal

Variation in Ecological Conditions. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $131,812 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received July 1996. Renewal - Recovery of Plant and Animal Communities in the Kibale Corridor.

L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $10,000 US. National Science Foundation. Received August 1996. The Role of Primates in Determining Tropical Forest Composition: Specific

Tests with Seed Dispersal. C.A. Chapman and S.R. Balcomb. Amount Received - $12,000 US. Lindbergh Foundation. Received June 1996. Restoration of an African Forest: The Role of Animals. C.A. Chapman. Amount

Received - $10,500 US. Linnean Society. Received April 1996. Restoration of Red Colobus Populations in Kibale Forest. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received

- £400. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received February 1996. Recovery of Plant and Animal Communities in the Kibale Corridor. L.J.

Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $10,000 US. Conservation, Food, & Health Foundation, Inc. Received January 1996. Tropical Conservation Literacy: Participation of Host Country

Students. C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, and T.L. Crisman. Amount Received - $8,400 US. Peabody Museum, Harvard University. Received January 1996. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $3,000 US. Graduate Research Assistantship Program - Division of Sponsored Research, University of Florida. Received October 1995.

Research in Kibale National Park: A Long-Term Approach. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $11,094 US. Wildlife Conservation Society. Received June 1995. Long-term Ecological Monitoring in Kibale Forest. L.J. Chapman and C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received - $ 8,320 US. Center for African Studies - University of Florida. Received April 1995. African Ecological Research. C.A. Chapman. Amount

Received - $2,500 US. Graduate Research Assistantship Program. Division of Sponsored Research, University of Florida. Received October 1994. Fruiting

Patterns in a Tropical Forest. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $10,772 US. National Geographic Research Grant. Received August 1994. The Role of Animals in the Restoration of African Forests. C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received - $18,100 US. Division of Sponsored Research, University of Florida. Research Support Program for New Faculty. Received October 1993.

Restoration of Degraded Forest in Africa: The Role of Animals. C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $15,000 US. NSF, Division of International Programs Grant. Received September 1993. Refugia and graveyards: patterns of species survivorship

in the fish fauna of Lake Victoria. L. Kaufman, L.J. Chapman, R. Ogutu-Ohwayo, and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $40,800 US.

USAID Program in Science and Technology Cooperation (PSTC). Received November 1992. Maintaining Frugivore Populations:

Implications for Conservation of Tropical Forest. R. Wrangham, C.A. Chapman, G. Isabirye-Basuta, & J. Kasenene. Amount Received - $145,600 US.

USAID Internal A.P.E. Funding. Received October 1992. Lake Nkuruba Conservation Education Project. Subcomponent (outreach).

L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and M. Steenbeek. Amount Received - $54,000 US.

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USAID Internal A.P.E. Funding. Received October 1992. Kibale Chimpanzee Project. R. Wrangham and C.A. Chapman. Amount

Received - $32,000 US. USAID Internal A.P.E. Funding. Received October 1992. Kibale Fish Project. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received -

$18,000 US. MUBFS Internal Support. Received October 1992. C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman and R.W. Wrangham. Amount Received - $4000

US. Peace Corps Volunteer for the African Crater Lakes Conservation Project. L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman and M. Steenbeek.

Estimated Value - $140,000 US. USAID Internal Funding. Received Sept. 1991. Kibale Chimpanzee Project. R.W. Wrangham and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received

- $27,000 US. USAID Internal Funding. Received Sept. 1991. African Crater Lakes Project. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received -

$12,000 US. National Geographic Research Grant. Received September 1990. Chimpanzee Society: Ecological and Social Determinants of

Association Patterns. R.W. Wrangham and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received - $24,000 US. USAID Internal Funding. Received October 1990. Kibale Chimpanzee Project: Additional Support. R. Wrangham and C.A.

Chapman. Amount Received - $17,000 US. USAID Internal Funding. Received July 1990. Kibale Chimpanzee Project. R.W. Wrangham and C.A. Chapman. Amount Received -

$60,000 US. USAID Internal Funding. Received October 1990. Fauna and Water Quality of African Crater Lakes: Additional Support. L.J.

Chapman, C.A. Chapman, J. Okedi, and L. Kaufman. Amount Received - $10,000 US. USAID Internal Funding. Received July 1990. Fauna and Water Quality of African Crater Lakes. L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, J.

Okedi, and L. Kaufman. Amount Received - $19,500 US. National Geographic Research Grant. Received March 1989. Primate Populations in Reclaimed Forest. C.A. Chapman and K.

Glander. Amount Received - $8,400 US. NSERC Post-Doctoral Fellowship. Received April 1988 - $56,000. University of Alberta Dissertation Fellowship. Received September 1986 - $12,000. Province of Alberta Graduate Fellowship. Received September 1985 - $8,700. NSERC Postgraduate Scholarship. Received 1984-1985, 1983- 1984, & 1982-1983 - $44,000. Publications Submitted Chapman, C.A., A. DeLuycker, R.A. Reyna-Hurtado, J.C. Serio-Silva, T.B. Smith, K.B. Strier, T.L. Goldberg. Safeguarding biodiversity:

What works according to the conservation community. Oryx (Submitted). Tranquilli, S., M. Abedi-Lartey, K. Abernethy, F. Amsini, L. Arranz, A. Asamoah, O. Babafemi, C. Balangtaa, N. Barakabuye, S. Blake,

E. Bouanga, T. Breuer, T. Brncic, G. Campbell, R. Chancellor, C.A. Chapman, T. Davenport, O. Diotoh, A. Dunn, J. Dupain, A. Ekobo, G. Etoga, T. Furuichi, S. Gatti, A. Ghiurghi, C. Hashimoto, J. Hart, T. Hart, J. Head, M. Hega, I. Herbinger, T. C. Hicks, L. H. Holbech, B. Huijbregts, H. Kuehl, I. Imong, S. Le-Duc Yeno, J. Linder, P. Marshall, J. Mba Ayetebe, P. Minasoma, D. Morgan, L. Mubalama, P. N'Goran, A. Nicholas, S. Nixon, E. Nku Manasseh, E. Normand, L. Nziguyimpa, Z. Nzooh-Dogmo, R. Ofori-Amanfo, C. Petre, H. Rainey, S. Regnaut, A. Rundus, C. Sanz, D. Tiku Okon, A. Todd, Y. Warren and V. Sommer. Protected areas in tropical Africa: Assessing threats and conservation activities. Conservation Biology (Submitted)

Chapman, C.A., T.R. Bonnell, V.A.M. Schoof and S. Calmé. Competing selective pressures: how disease may offset potential

increases in animal abundance due to improved food availability and decreased stress. Evolutionary Applications (Submitted).

Vander Wal, E., S. Calmé, C.A. Chapman, M. Festa-Bianchet, D. Garant, V. Millien, S. Rioux-Paquette, F. Pelletier. Applying

evolutionary concepts to the ecology of wildlife disease. Evolutionary Applications (Submitted). Bonnell, T.R., R.R. Ghai, T.L. Goldberg, R. Sengupta, and C.A. Chapman. Comparing the relative effects of habitat loss and

fragmentation on the transmission of a fecally-transmitted parasite in a primate population. Ecological Applications (Submitted).

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Teichroeb, J.A., M.M.J. White, and C.A. Chapman. Rank, patch size, and spatial position affect producer-scrounger tactics and the

finder’s share in vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus pygerythrus). Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology (Submitted) Sarkar, D., C.A., Chapman, L. Griffin, and R. Sengupta. Analyzing animal movement characteristics from location data. Transactions

in GIS (Submitted). Tombak, K.J. and C.A. Chapman. Social dynamics in red colobus monkeys indicate egalitarianism and more social partners than

expected for a small-brained folivore. Behaviour (Submitted). Osazuwa-Peters, O.L., C.A. Chapman, I. Jimenez, and A.E. Zanne. Selective logging: does the imprint remain on tree structure and

composition after 45 years? Journal of Ecology (Submitted). Gogarten, J.F., A.L. Jacob, R.R. Ghai, J.M. Rothman., D. Twinomugisha, M.D. Wasserman, and C.A. Chapman Causes and

consequences of changing group sizes in a primate community over 15+ years: Implications of non-equilibrium states. Biotropica (Submitted).

Sibley, S.L., M. Lauck, M.A. Bailey, D. Hyeroba, A. Tumukunde, G. Weny, C.A. Chapman, D.H. O’Connor, T.L. Goldberg, T.C.

Friedrich. Discovery and characterization of distinct simian pegiviruses in three wild African Old World monkey species. PLoS One.(Submitted).

Ryan, S., J. Hartter, J. Palace, M. Diem and C.A. Chapman. Population pressure and global markets drive deforestation in Africa’s

Albertine Rift. National GeoScience (Submitted). Hartter, J., S. Ryan, M., Palace, A. Goldman, N. Dowhaniuk, J. Diem, J., and C.A. Chapman. A Kingdom in transition: the impacts of

migration and maize. Global Environmental Change (Submitted). Bailey,A.L., M. Lauck, A. Weiler,S,D. Sibley,J. Dinis, Z. Bergman, A.L. Hughes, C.W. Nelson, M. Correll, M, Gleicher, D. Hyeroba, A.

Tumukunde, G. Weny, C. A. Chapman,J. Kuhn, T.C. Friedrich, T.L. Goldberg, and D.H. O’Connor. High genetic diversity and adaptive potential of two simian hemorrhagic fever viruses in a wild primate population. PLoS ONE (Submitted).

Masette, M., G. Isabirye-Basuta, D. Baranga, C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Rothman. The complexity of interpreting primate diets: The

case of Blighia unijugata use by mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena). African Journal of Ecology (Submitted). Raubenheimer, D., J.G.E. Machovsky-Capuska, C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Rothman. Geometry of nutrition in field studies: an

illustration using wild primates. Functional Ecology (Submitted). Serio-Silva, J.C., L.J., Schooler L.J., R. Rhine, and C.A. Chapman. Does contrasting ecological niches provide insights into human

memory and selective pressures on early hominid? PLoS One (Submitted).

Reyna-Hurtado, R., H. Beck, M. Altrichter, C.A. Chapman, A. Keuroghlian, A.L.J. Desbiez, J. Moreira, G. O’Farrill, J. Fragoso, and E.J. Naranjo. What ecological and anthropogenic factors affects on group size in white-lipped peccaries (Tayassu pecari)? Biotropica (Submitted)

Arlet, M.E., C.A. Chapman, F. Molleman, P. Hõrak, J.R. Carey, and R. Mänd. A cost of migration: increased parasite infections in

immigrant mangabey males. Primates (Submitted) Rothman, J.M., C.A. Chapman, T.T. Struhsaker, D. Raubenheimer, D. Twinomugisha, and P.G. Waterman. Cascading effects of

global change: Decline in nutritional quality of tropical leaves. Biology Letters (Submitted). Teichroeb, J.A., C.A. Chapman, P. Sicotte. Folivorous ursine colobus monkeys (Colobus vellerosus) do the Lévy walk. International

Journal of Primatology (Submitted). Accepted with Revisions Serio-Silva, J.C., E. Olguín-Palacios, L. Garcia-Feria1, K. L. Tapia-Fierro, and C.A. Chapman. Cascading effect of anthropogenic

habitat loss: deforestation, flooding, and lead toxicity in howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra). International Journal of Primatology (Accepted with Revisions).

Omeja, P.A., A.L. Jacob, M.J. Lawes, J.S. Lwanga, J.M. Rothman, C. Tumwesigye, and C.A. Chapman. Do changes in elephant

density affect forest composition and regeneration? Biotropica (Accepted with revisions). Duclos, V., S. Boudreau and C.A. Chapman. Impact of a recalcitrant herbaceous cover (Acanthus pubescens) following logging in a

tropical forest on plant-animal interactions and forest regeneration. Journal of Tropical Ecology (Accepted with Revisions). In Press Gogarten, J.F., T.R. Bonnell, M. Campenni, M.D. Wasserman, and C.A. Chapman. Group size alters behaviour of a folivorous

primate. International Journal of Primatology (In Press).

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Hanya, G., M. Fuse, S.-I. Aiba, H. Takafumi, R. Tsujino, N. Agetsuma, and C. A. Chapman. Ecosystem impacts of folivory and frugivory by Japanese macaques in two temperate forests in Takushima. American Journal of Primatology (On Line).

González-Zamora, A., V. Arroyo-Rodríguez, F. Escobar, M. Rös, K. Oyama, G. Ibarra-Manríquez, K.E. Stoner, and C.A. Chapman.

Contagious deposition of seeds in spider monkeys sleeping trees limits effective seed dispersal in fragmented landscapes PloS One (In Press).

Milich K.M., R.M. Stumpf, J.M. Chambers and C.A. Chapman. Female red colobus monkeys maintain their densities through flexible

feeding strategies in logged forests in Kibale National Park, Uganda. American Journal of Physical Anthropology (In Press). Dáttilo, W., J.C. Serio-Silva, C.A. Chapman, and V. Rico-Gray. Highly nested diets in intrapopulation tropical monkey-resource food

webs. American Journal of Primatology (In Press). Chapman, C.A., B. van Bavel, C. Boodman, R.R. Ghai, J.F. Gogarten, J. Hartter, L.E. Mechak, P.A. Omeja, S. Poonawala, D. Tuli,

and T.L. Goldberg. Providing health care to promote people-park relations. Oryx (In Press). Ghai, R.R., C.A. Chapman, P.A. Omeja, T.J. Davies, and T.L. Goldberg. Nodule worm infection in humans and wild primates in

Uganda: cryptic species in a newly identified region of human transmission. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (In Press). González-Hernández, M., P. Américo, D. Dias, A. Rangel-Negrín, D. Canales-Espinosa, V.A.M Schoof, and C.A. Chapman.

Transmission patterns of pinworms in two sympatric congeneric primate species. International Journal of Primatology (In Press).

Milich K.M., J.M. Bahr, R.M. Stumpf, and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Timing is everything: expanding the cost-of-sexual-attraction

hypothesis. Animal Behaviour (In Press). Mikkelson, G.M. and C.A. Chapman. Individualistic environmental ethics: a reduction ad exstinctum. Environmental Ethics (In

Press). Arlet, M.E., L.A. Isbell, F. Molleman, A. Kaasik, R.L. Chancellor, C.A. Chapman, R. Mänd, and J.R. Carey. Maternal investment and

infant survival in gray-cheeked mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena johnstonii). International Journal of Primatology (In Press). McCord, A., C.A. Chapman, G. Weny, A. Tumukunde, D. Hyeroba, K. Klotz, A.S. Koblings, D.N.M. Mbora, M. Cregger, B.A. White,

S.R. Leigh, and T.L. Goldberg. Fecal microbiomes of non-human primates in western Uganda reveal species-specific communities largely resistant to habitat perturbation. American Journal of Primatology (On Line).

Lauck, M., W.M. Switzer, S.D. Sibley, D., Hyeroba, A. Tumukunde, G. Weny, B. Taylor, A. Shankar, N. Ting, C.A. Chapman, T.C.

Friedrich, T.L., Goldberg, T.L., D.H. O’Connor. Discovery of a new SIV lineage infecting red-tailed guenons in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Journal of Virology (In Press)

Teichroeb, J.A., and C.A. Chapman. Food patch detection and landmark use by wild vervet monkeys. Animal Cognition (On Line). Reyna-Hurtado, R., A. Tumukunde, C.A. Chapman, E. Rojas, M. Sanvicente, R. Sengupta, and S. Calme. On the track of the Giant

Forest Hog in Kibale National Park, Uganda; A report on studying the species and preliminary data. Suid Newsletter (In Press).

Tumukunde, A., Reyna-Hurtado, R., M. Sanvicente, A.I. McCord, E. Rojas, S. Calme, T.L. Goldberg, and C.A. Chapman. The

invisible animal: Kibale National Park’s giant forest hog is in danger of extinction. Suid Newsletter (In Press). Chapman, C.A. and J.M. Rothman. Frugivores and folivores: Foraging challenges and social consequences. In: Social ecology of

dolphins, monkeys, and apes: A comparative overview. L. Karczmarski and J. Yamagiwa eds. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (In Press).

Chapman, C.A., T.V. Snaith, and J.F. Gogarten. How ecological conditions affect the abundance and social organization of folivorous

monkeys. In. Social Ecology of Dolphins, Monkeys and Apes: A Comparative Overview. J. Yamagiwa & L. Karczmarski eds., University of Chicago Press, Chicago, (In Press).

Published Irwin, M.T., J-L. Raharison, D. Raubenheimer, C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Rothman. 2014. Nutritional correlates of the “lean season”:

effects of seasonality and frugivory on the nutritional ecology of diademed sifakas. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 153:78-91.

Ghai, R.R., S.D. Sibley, M. Lauck, J.M. Dinis, A.L. Bailey, C.A. Chapman, P. Omeja, T.C. Freidrich, D.H. O’Connor, T.L. Goldberg.

2013. Deep sequencing identifies two genotypes and high viral genetic diversity of human pegivirus (GB Virus C) in rural Ugandan patients. Journal of General Virology 94:2670-2678.

Chapman, C.A., T.V. Snaith, and J.F. Gogarten. 2013. How ecological conditions affect the abundance and social organization of

folivorous monkeys. In. Primates and Cetaceans: Field research and conservation of complex mammalian societies. J. Yamagiwa & L. Karczmarski eds., Springer, New York, pp 3-23.

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Twinomugisha, D., M.D. Wasserman, and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Deriving conservation status for a high altitude population: Golden

monkeys of Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda. In. N.B. Grow, S. Gursky-Doyen and , A. Krzton (eds.). High Altitude Primates, Springer, New York, pp. 227-243.

Bonnell, T.R., C.A. Chapman, R. Reyna-Hurtado, M.D. Wasserman, M. Campenni, J. Gogarten, J. Teichroeb, R. Sengupta. 2013.

Emergent group level navigation: an agent-based evaluation of movement patterns in a folivorous primate. PLoSOne 8:e78264.

Vaccaro, I., C.A. Chapman, E.A. Nyboer, M. Luke, A. Byekwaso, C. Morgan, D. Mbabazi, D. Twinomugisha, and L.J. Chapman. 2013.

An interdisciplinary method to harmonizing ecology, economy, and co-management: fisheries exploitation in Lake Nabugabo, Uganda. African Journal of Aquatic Science 38:97-104.

Wasserman, M.D., C.A. Chapman, K. Milton, T.L. Goldberg, T.E. Ziegler. 2013. Physiological and behavioral effects of capture

darting on red colobus monkeys (Procolobus rufomitratus) with a comparison to chimpanzee predation. International Journal of Primatology 34:1020-1031.

Wasserman, M.D., K. Milton, and C.A. Chapman. 2013. The potential roles of estrogenic plants in primate ecology and evolution.

International Journal of Primatology 34:861-878. Chapman, C.A., T.R. Bonnell., R. Sengupta., T.L. Goldberg, and J.M. Rothman. 2013. Is Markhamia lutea’s abundance determined

by animal foraging? Forest Ecology and Management 308:62-66. Marsh, L.K. and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Primates in fragments: complexity and resilience. Springer Press. Pp. 537 Arroyo-Rodriguez, V., E. Cuesta-del Moral, S. Mandujano, C.A. Chapman, R. Reyna-Hurtado and Lenore Fahrig. 2013. Assessing

habitat fragmentation effects for primates: the importance of evaluating questions at the correct scale. In: L.K. Marsh and C.A. Chapman. Primates in fragments: complexity and resilience. Springer Press, New York. Pp.13-32.

Chapman, C.A., R.R. Ghai, R. Reyna-Hurtado, A.L. Jacob, S.M. Koojo, J.M. Rothman, D. Twinomugisha, M.D. Wasserman, and T.L.

Goldberg. 2013. Going, going, gone: A 15-year history of the decline in abundance of primates in forest fragments. In: L.K. Marsh and C.A. Chapman. Primates in fragments: complexity and resilience. Springer Press, New York. 89-104.

Baranga, D., C.A. Chapman, P. Mucunguzi, and R. Reyna-Hurtado. 2013. Fragments and food: red-tailed monkey abundance in

forest fragments of Central Uganda. In: L.K. Marsh and C.A. Chapman eds. Primates in fragments: complexity and resilience. Springer Press, New York Pp. 213-226.

Marsh, L.K., C. A. Chapman, V. Arroyo-Rodriguez, A.K. Cobden, J. Dunn, D. Gabriel, R.R. Ghai, V. Nijman, R. Reyna-Hurtado, J.C.

Serio-Silva, G. Silva-Lopez, and M. D. Wasserman. 2013. Primates in fragments ten years later: once and future goals. In: L.K. Marsh and C.A. Chapman. Primates in fragments: complexity and resilience. Springer Press, New York. 503-524.

Chapman, C. A. 2014. The evolution of a conservation biologist, pp. 218-227, in Strier, K. B., Primate Ethnographies. Pearson

Education, Inc., One Lake Street, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. Pozo-Montuy, G., J.C. Serio-Silva, C.A. Chapman, and Y.M. Bonilla-Sánchez. 2013. Resource use in a landscape matrix by an

arboreal primate: Evidence of supplementation in Alouatta pigra. International Journal of Primatology 34:714-731. Lauck, M., W.M. Switzer, S.D. Sibley, D. Hyeroba, A. Tumukunde, G. Weny, B. Taylor, A. Shankar, N. Ting, C.A. Chapman, T.C.

Friedrich, T.L. Goldberg and D.H. O’Connor. 2013. Discovery and full genome characterization of two highly divergent simian simian immunodeficiency viruses infecting black-and-white colobus monkeys (Colobus guereza) in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Retrovirology 10: 107 doi:10.1186/1742-4690-10-107.

Lauck, M., S.D. Sibley, J. Lara, M.A. Purdy, Y. Khudyakov, D. Hyeroba, A. Tumukunde, G. Weny, W.M. Switzer, C.A. Chapman, A.L.

Hughes, T.C. Friedrich, D.H. O’Connor, and T.L. Goldberg. 2013. A novel hepacivirus with an unusually long and intrinsically disordered NS5A protein in a wild old world primate. Journal of Virology 87:8971-8981.

Bonnell, T.R., P. Dutilleul, C.A. Chapman, R. Reyna-Hurtado, R. Uriel Hernández-Sarabia, and R. Sengupta 2013. Analysing small-

scale aggregation in animal visits in space and time: the ST-BBD method. Animal Behaviour 85:483-492. Thurbera, M.I., R.R. Ghai, D. Hyeroba, G. Weny. A. Tumukunde, C.A. Chapman, R.W. Wiseman, J. Dinis, J. Steeil, E.C. Greiner, T.C.

Friedich, D.H. O’Connor, and T.L. Goldberg. 2013. Co-infection and cross-species transmission of divergent Hepatocystis lineages in a wild African primate community. International Journal for Parasitology 43:613-619.

Valtonen, A., F. Molleman, C.A. Chapman, J.R. Carey, M.P. Ayres and H. Roininen. 2013. Tropical phenology: bi-annual rhythms

and interannual variation in an Afrotropical butterfly assemblage. Ecosphere 4:1-28. Hanya, G. and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Linking feeding ecology and abundance: a review of primate resource limitation. Ecological

Research 28:183-190.

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Duclos, V., S. Boudreau and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Shrub cover influence on seedling growth and survival following logging of a tropical forest. Biotropica 45:419-426.

Miyamoto, M.M., J.A. Allen, N. Ting, J.F. Gogarten, and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Microsatellite DNA demonstrates different levels of

genetic structure in two, unequally sizes neighboring groups of red colobus monkeys. American Journal of Primatology 75:478–490.

Bryer, M.A., C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Rothman. 2013. Diet and polyspecific associations affects spatial patterns among redtail

monkeys (Cercopithecus ascanius). Behaviour 150:277-293, Felton, A.M., A. Felton, D.I. Rumiz, M. Pena-Claros, N. Villaroel, C.A. Chapman, and D.B. Lindenmayer. 2013. Commercial

harvesting of Ficus timber – An emerging threat to frugivorous wildlife and sustainable forestry. Biological Conservation 159:96-100.

Chapman, C.A., T.R. Bonnell, J.F. Gogarten, J.E. Lambert, P.A. Omeja, D. Twinomugisha, M.D. Wasserman, and J.M. Rothman.

2013. Primates as ecosystem engineers. International Journal of Primatology 34:1-14. Serio-Silva J.C., Y.M. Bonilla-Sanchez, G. Pozo-Montuy, R. Reyna-Hurtado and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Identifying areas for

ecotourism and conservation of threatened species: The model of black howler monkey in Playas de Catazajá, Mexico. In: A. Yañez-Arancibia, R. Dávalos-Sotelo and E. Reyes (eds), Ecological dimension for sustainable socioeconomic development, WIT Press, Southampton, UK pp.

Lauck, M., S.D. Sibley, D. Hyeroba, A. Tumukunde, G. Weny, C.A. Chapman, N. Ting, W.M. Switzer, J.H. Kuhn, T.C. Friedrich, D.H.

O’Connor, and T.L. Goldberg 2013. Exceptional simian hemorrhagic fever virus diversity in a wild African primate community. Journal of Virology 87:688-691.

Chapman, C.A., J.M. Rothman, and J.E. Lambert 2012 Food as a selective force in primates. In: Mitani J, Call J, Kappeler P,

Palombit R, Silk J, The Evolution of Primate Societies. Chicago University Press, pp. 149-168. Ryan, A., C.A. Chapman, J.M. Rothman. 2012. How do differences in plant species and part consumption affect diet nutrient

concentrations? A test with red colobus monkeys in Uganda. African Journal of Ecology 51:1-10. Laurence, W.F. et al. 2012. Averting biodiversity collapse in tropical forest protected areas. Nature 489:290-294. Wasserman, M.D., C.A. Chapman, K. Milton, D.J. Wittwer and T.E. Ziegler. 2012. Consumption of estrogenic plant foods:

Implications for red colobus monkeys (Procolobus rufomitratus) hormonal status. Hormones and Behaviour 62:553-569. González-Zamora, A.,V. Arroyo-Rodríguez, K. Oyama, V. Sork, C.A. Chapman, and K.E. Stoner. 2012. Sleeping sites and latrines of

spider monkeys in continuous and fragmented tropical rainforests: implications for seed dispersal and forest regeneration. PLoSOne October 2012, Volume 7, Issue 10, e46852.

Allen, J.M., M.M. Miyamoto, J. Akwarius, K. Margarini, J. Unvari-Martin, T. Carter and C.A. Chapman. 2012. Population genetics of

habitat sensitive red colobus suggest long-term stability of Kibale National Park. Ecology and Evolution 2:2829-2842. Gogarten, J.F., L.M. Brown, C.A. Chapman, M. Cords, D. Doran-Sheehy, L.M. Fedigan, F.E. Grine, S. Perry, A.E. Pusey, E.H.M.

Sterck, S.A. Wich, and P.C. Wright. 2012. Seasonal mortality patterns in non-human primates: Implications for variation in selection pressures across environments. Evolution 66:3256-3266.

Gogarten, J.F., M. Guzman, C.A. Chapman, A.L. Jacob, P.A. Omeja, and Jessica M. Rothman. 2012. What is the predictive power of

the colobine protein-to-fiber model and its conservation value? Tropical Conservation Science 5:381-393. Ghai, R.R. and C.A. Chapman. 2012. Meet the parasites: genetic approaches uncover new insights in parasitology. Taprobanica

4:60-64. Hodder, S.A.M. and C.A. Chapman. 2012. Do Colobus monkeys on humanized forest edges exhibit more severe parasite infections

than those on non-humanized forest edges? International Journal of Primatology 33:845-859. Scholl, K., J.M. Allen, F. Leendertz, C.A. Chapman, and D.L. Reed. 2012. Variable microsatellite loci for population genetic analysis

of old world monkey lice (Pedicinus sp.). Journal of Parasitology 98:930-937. Chapman, C.A. and J.A. Teichroeb. 2012. What influences the size of groups in which primates choose to live? Nature Education

http://www.nature.com/scitable/knowledge/library/what-influences-the-size-of-groups-in-58068275 Chapman, C.A. and J.F. Gogarten. 2012. Primate conservation: Is the cup half empty or half full? Nature Education

http://www.nature.com/scitable/knowledge/library/primate-conservation-is-the-cup-half-empty-53872551 Salyer, S.J., C.A. Chapman and T.L. Goldberg. 2012. Epidemiology and molecular relationships of Cryptosporidium spp. in people,

primates, and livestock from western Uganda. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 6:e1597.

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Evans, D.M., P. Barnard, L.P. Koh, C.A. Chapman, R. Altwegg, T.W.J. Garner, M.E. Gompper, I.J. Gordon, T.E. Katzner, and N. Pettorelli. 2012. Funding nature conservation: who pays. Animal Conservation 15:215-216.

Ryan, S.J., J.S. Brashares, C. Walsh, K. Milbers, C. Kilroy and C.A. Chapman. 2012. A survey of gastrointestinal parasites of olive

baboons (Papio anubis) in human settlement areas of Mole National Park, Ghana. Journal of Parasitology 98:885-888. Wasserman, M.D., A. Taylor-Gutt, J.M. Rothman, C.A. Chapman, K. Milton, and D.C. Leitman. 2012. The estrogenic plant foods of

red colobus monkeys and mountain gorillas in western Uganda. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 148:88-97. Rothman, J.M., C.A. Chapman, and P.J. van Soest. 2012. Methods in primate nutritional ecology: A user’s guide. International

Journal of Primatology 33:542-566. Bonilla-Sanchez,Y.M., J.C. Serio-Silva, G. Pozo-Montuy and C.A. Chapman. 2012. Howlers are able to survive in Eucalyptus

plantations where remnant and regenerating vegetation is available. International Journal of Primatology 33:233-245. Hartter, J., M.D. Stampone, S.J. Ryan, K. Kirner, C.A. Chapman and A. Goldman. 2012. Patterns and perceptions of climate change

around a biodiversity hotspot. PlosOne 7:e32408. Omeja, P.A., J. Obua, A. Rwetsiba and C.A. Chapman. 2012. Biomass accumulation in tropical lands with different disturbance

histories: Contrasts within one landscape and across regions. Forest Ecology and Management 269:293-300. Goldberg, T.L., S. Paige, and C.A. Chapman. 2012. The Kibale EcoHealth Project: Exploring connections among human health,

animal health, and landscape dynamics in Western Uganda. In: A.A. Aguirre, P. Daszak, and R.S. Ostfeld editors. Conservation Medicine: Applied Cases of Ecological Health, Oxford University Press, pp. 452-465.

Reyna-Hurtado, R., C.A. Chapman, S. Calme, and E.J. Pedersen. 2012. Searching in heterogeneous and limiting environments:

foraging strategies of white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari). Journal of Mammalogy 93:124-133. MacKenzie, C., C.A. Chapman, and R. Sengupta. 2012. Spatial patterns of illegal resource extraction in Kibale National Park,

Uganda. Environmental Conservation 39:38-50. Chapman, C.A., D.D. Bowman, R.R. Ghai, T.L. Goldberg, J.F. Gogarten, J.M. Rothman, D. Twinomugisha, and C. Walsh. 2011.

Protozoan parasites in group-living primates: Testing the biological island hypothesis. American Journal of Primatology 74:510-517.

Baranga, D., G. Isabirye-Basuta, J.A. Teichroeb, and C.A. Chapman. 2012. Crop raiding patterns of solitary and social groups of red-

tailed monkeys in Uganda. Tropical Conservation Science 5:104-111. Janmaat, K.R.L., C.A. Chapman, R. Meijer, and K. Zuberbuhler. 2012. The use of fruiting synchronicity by foraging mangabeys

(Lophocebus albigena). Animal Cognition 15:83-96. Tombak, K.H., A.J. Reid, A.J., C.A. Chapman, J.M. Rothman, C.A. Johnson, and R. Reyna-Hurtado. 2012. Patch depletion behavior

differs between sympatric folivorous primates. Primates 53:57-64. Lauck, M., D. Hyeroba, A. Tumukunde, G. Weny, S.M. Lank, C.A. Chapman D.H. O’Connor, T.C. Friedrich, and T.L. Goldberg. 2011.

Novel, divergent simian hemorrhagic fever viruses in a wild Ugandan red colobus monkey discovered using direct pyroseqeuncing. PLoS One 6:e19056.

Naughton, L., J. Alix-Garcia, and C.A. Chapman. 2011. A decade of forest loss and economic growth around Kibale National Park,

Uganda: Lessons for poverty reduction and biodiversity conservation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 108:13919–13924.

Lauck, M., D.O’Connor, T. Friedrich, D. Hyeroba, A. Tumukunde, G. Weny, S.M. Lank, C.A. Chapman and T.L. Goldberg. 2011.

Novel, divergent simian hemorrhagic fever viruses in a wild Ugandan red colobus monkey discovered using unbiased direct pyroseqeuncing. PLoS One 6:e19056.

Bonnell, T.R., R. Sengupta, C.A. Chapman, and T.L. Goldberg. 2011. Linking disease to landscapes: An agent-based model

simulating the impact of forest composition on the spread of disease in red colobus monkeys. Proceedings of ICA-ISPRS 2011 Joint Workshop, Burnaby, 10-12 August, Canada.

Hanya, G., P. Stevenson, M. van Noordwijk, S.T. Wong, T. Kanamori, N. Kuze, S. Aiba, C.A. Chapman, and C. van Schaik. 2011.

Seasonality in fruit availability affects frugivorous primate biomass and species richness. Ecography 34:1009-1017. Rothman, J.M., D. Raubenheimer, and C.A. Chapman. 2011. Nutritional geometry: Gorillas prioritize energy in a forest with protein

surpluses. Biology Letters 7:847-849. Hartter, J. S.J. Ryan, J. Southworth, and C.A. Chapman. 2011. Landscapes as continuous entities: forest disturbance and recovery

in the Albertine Rift landscape. Landscape Ecology 26:877-890.

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O’Farrill, G.X., C.A. Chapman and A. Gonzalez. 2011. Origin and deposition sites influence seed germination and seedling survival of Manilkara zapota: implications for long-distance animal mediated seed dispersal. Seed Science Research 21:305-313.

Omeja, P.A. J.S. Lwanga, J. Obua, C.A. Chapman. 2011. Fire control as a simple means of promoting tropical forest restoration.

Tropical Conservation Science 4:287-299. Stampone, M., J. Hartter, C.A. Chapman, S.J. Ryan. 2011. Trends and variability in localized precipitation around Kibale National

Park, Western Uganda, Africa. Research Journal of Environmental and Earth Sciences 3:14-23. Chapman, C.A. 2011. Professor Toshisada Nishida: An inspiration for academic research and conservation. Primates 52:397-398. Bonnell, T.R., R. Reyna-Hurtado, and C.A. Chapman. 2011. Post-logging recovery time is longer than expected in an East African

tropical forest. Forest Ecology and Management 261:855-864. Omeja, P.A., C.A. Chapman, J. Obua, J.S. Lwanga, A.L. Jacob, F. Wanyama, and R. Mugenyi. 2011 Intensive tree planting facilitates

tropical forest biodiversity and biomass accumulation. Forest Ecology and Management 261:703-709. Struhsaker, T.T., C.A. Chapman, and T.R. Pope. 2011. Healthy baboon with no upper jaw or nose: an extreme case of adaptability in

the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Primates 52:15-18. Bonnell, T.R., R.R. Sengupta, C.A. Chapman, and T.L. Goldberg. 2010. Linking landscapes to disease: Implications of spatial

changes in resource distribution for red colobus monkey disease transmission. Ecological Modelling 221:2491-2500. Chapman, C.A., T.T. Struhsaker, J.P. Skorupa, T.V. Snaith and J.M. Rothman. 2010. Understanding long-term primate community

dynamics: Implications of forest change. Ecological Applications 20:179-191. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, R.R. Ghai, J., Hartter, A.L. Jacob, J.S. Lwanga, P.A. Omeja, J.M., Rothman, and D. Twinomugisha.

2010. Complex responses to climate and anthropogenic changes: An evaluation based on long-term data from Kibale National Park, Uganda. A. Plumptre ed. Nova Science Publishers, The Ecological Impact of Long-Term Changes in Africa's Rift Valley. Hauppauge, New York pp. 70-87.

Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, A.L. Jacob, J.M. Rothman, P. Omeja, R. Reyna-Hurtado, J. Hartter, and M.J. Lawes. 2010. Tropical

tree community shifts: Implications for wildlife conservation. Biological Conservation 143:366-374. Wanyama, F., R. Muhabwe, A.J. Plumptre, C.A. Chapman and J.M. Rothman. 2010. Censusing large mammals in Kibale National

Park: evaluation of the intensity of sampling required to determine change. African Journal of Ecology 48:953-961. Harris, T.R., C.A. Chapman, and S.L. Monfort. 2010. Small folivorous primate groups exhibit behavioral and physiological effects of

food scarcity. Behavioral Ecology 21:46-56. Russo, S.S. and C.A. Chapman. 2011. Primate seed dispersal: Linking behavioural ecology and forest community structure. In:

Campbell, C.J., A.F. Fuentes, K.C. MacKinnon, M. Panger, and S. Bearder (Eds.). Primates in Perspective. Oxford University Press. pp 523-534.

Southworth, J., J. Hartter, M. Binford, A. Goldman, C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, J. Hartter, A.P. Omeja, and E. Binford. 2010. Parks,

People and Pixels: Evaluating landscape effects of an East African national park on its surroundings. Tropical Conservation Science 3:122-142.

Chapman, C.A., M.L. Speirs, S.A.M. Hodder, and J.M. Rothman. 2010. Colobus parasite infections in wet and dry habitats:

Implications for climate change. African Journal of Ecology 48:555-558. Behie, A.M., M.S.M. Pavelka, and C.A. Chapman. 2010. Sources of variation in fecal cortisol levels in howler monkeys in Belize.

American Journal of Primatology 72:600-606. Houle, A., C.A. Chapman, and W.L. Vickery. 2010. Intratree vertical variation in fruit abundance and the nature of contest competition

in frugivores. Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology 64:429-441. Reyna-Hurado, R., E. Naranjo, C.A. Chapman, and G.W. Tanner. 2009. Relating hunting patterns, population density and group size

to white-lipped peccary Tayassu pecari conservation in Calakmul, Mexico. Oryx 44:89-96. Potts, K.B., C.A. Chapman, and J.S. Lwanga. 2009. Floristic heterogeneity between forested sites in Kibale National Park, Uganda:

Insights into fine-scale determinants of density in a large bodied frugivorous primate. Journal of Animal Ecology 78:1269-1277. Baranga, D., C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Kasenene. 2009. The structure and status of forest fragments outside protected areas in

central Uganda. African Journal of Ecology 47:664-669. Omeja, P.A., C.A. Chapman, and J. Obua. 2009. Enrichment planting does not promote native tropical tree restoration in a former

pine plantation. African Journal of Ecology 47:650-657.

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Goldberg,T.L., D.M. Sintasath, C.A. Chapman, K.M. Cameron, W.B. Karesh, S. Tang, N.D. Wolfe, I.B. Rwego, N. Ting, W.M. Switzer 2009. Co-infection of Ugandan red colobus (Procolobus [Piliocolobus] rufomitratus tephrosceles) with novel, divergent delta-,lenti- and spuma- retroviruses. Journal of Virology 83:11318-11329.

Chapman, C.A. and Rothman, J.M. 2009. Within-species differences in primate social structure: Evolution of plasticity and

phylogenetic constraints. Primates 50:12-22. Olupot, W., R. Barigyira, and C.A. Chapman. 2009. The status of anthropogenic threat at the people-park interface of Bwindi

Impenetrable National Park Uganda. Environmental Conservation 36:41-50. Rothman, J.M., C.A. Chapman, J.L. Hansen, D.J. Cherney, and A.N. Pell. 2009. Rapid assessment of the nutritional value of

mountain gorilla foods: applying near-infrared reflectance spectroscopy to primatology. International Journal of Primatology 30:729-742.

Harris, T.R., D. Caillaud, Chapman, C.A., and L. Vigilant. 2009. Neither genetic nor observational data alone are sufficient for

understanding sex-biased dispersal in a social-group-living species. Molecular Ecology 18:1777-1790. Chapman, C.A., J.M. Rothman, and S.A.M. Hodder. 2009. Can parasites be a selective force influencing primate group size?: A test

with red colobus. In: Primate parasite ecology: The dynamics and study of host-parasite relationships. M.A. Huffman and C.A. Chapman editors. Primate Parasite Ecology: The Dynamics and Study of Host-Parasite Relationships. Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp. 423-440.

Chapman, C.A., S.A.M. Hodder, and J.M. Rothman. 2009. Host-parasite dynamics: Connecting primate field data to theory. In:

Primate parasite ecology: The dynamics and study of host-parasite relationships. M.A. Huffman and C.A. Chapman editors. Primate Parasite Ecology: The Dynamics and Study of Host-Parasite Relationships. Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp, 463-484.

Chapman, C.A., M. A. Huffman, S.J. Ryan, R. Sengupta, and T.L. Goldberg. 2009. Ways forward in the study of primate disease

ecology. In: Primate parasite ecology: The dynamics and study of host-parasite relationships. M.A. Huffman and C.A. Chapman editors. Primate Parasite Ecology: The Dynamics and Study of Host-Parasite Relationships. Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp, 487-506.

Hasegawa, H., C.A. Chapman and M.A. Huffman. 2009. Useful diagnostic references and images of protozoans, helminths, and

nematodes commonly found in wild primates. In: Primate parasite ecology: The dynamics and study of host-parasite relationships. M.A. Huffman and C.A. Chapman editors. Primate Parasite Ecology: The Dynamics and Study of Host-Parasite Relationships. Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp. 507-513.

Huffman, M.A. and C.A. Chapman editors. 2009. Primate Parasite Ecology: The Dynamics and Study of Host-Parasite Relationships.

Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, P. Omeja, and D. Twinomugisha. 2008 Long-term studies reveal the conservation potential for

integrating habitat restoration and animal nutrition. In: Science and Conservation in African Forests: The Benefits of Long- term Research, R.W. Wrangham and E. Ross (eds). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge pp. 51-62.

Snaith, T.V. and C.A. Chapman. 2008. Red colobus monkeys display alternative behavioural responses to the costs of scramble

competition. Behavioural Ecology 19:1289-1296. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, L.S. Kaufman, F. Witte, and J. Balirwa. 2008. Biodiversity conservation in African inland waters:

Lessons of the Lake Victoria region. Verh. Internat. Verein. Limnol. 30:16-34. Rothman, J.M., C.A. Chapman, D. Twinomugisha, M.D. Wasserman, J.E. Lambert, and T. Goldberg. 2008. Measuring physical traits

of primates remotely: the use of parallel lasers. American Journal of Primatology 70:1191-1195. Jacob, A.L., I. Vaccaro, R. Sengupta, J. Hartter, and C.A. Chapman 2008. How can conservation biology best prepare for declining

rural population and ecological homogenization? Tropical Conservation Science 4:307-320. Goldberg, T.L., T.R. Gillespie, I.B. Rwego, E.L. Estoff, and C.A. Chapman. 2008. Forest fragmentation as cause of bacterial

transmission among non-human primates, humans, and livestock, Uganda. Emerging Infectious Diseases 14:1375-1382. Twinomugisha, D., and C.A. Chapman. 2008. Golden monkey ranging in relation to spatial and temporal variation in food availability:

Implication for conservation. African Journal of Ecology 46:585-593. Bezjian, M., T.R. Gillespie, C.A. Chapman, and E.C. Greiner. 2008 Gastrointestinal parasites of forest baboons, Papio anubis, in

Kibale National Park, Uganda. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 44:878-887. Arlet, M.E., F. Molleman, and C.A. Chapman. 2008. Mating tactics in male grey-cheeked mangabeys (Lophocebus ugandae).

Ethology 114:851-862.

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Goldberg, T.L., C.A. Chapman, K. Cameron, T. Saj, W. Karesh, N. Wolfe, S.W. Wong, M.E. Dubois, and M.K. Slifka. 2008. Serologic evidence for a novel poxvirus in endangered red colobus monkeys. Emerging Infectious Diseases 14:801-803.

Lawes, M.J., M.E. Griffiths, J.J. Midgley, S. Boudreau, H.A.C. Eeley and C.A. Chapman. 2008. Tree spacing and area of competitive

influence do not scale with tree size in an African rainforest Journal of Vegetation Science 19:729-738. Chapman, C.A., K. Kitajima, A.E. Zanne, L.S. Kaufman, and M.J. Lawes. 2008. A 10-yr evaluation of the functional basis for

regeneration habitat preference of trees in an African evergreen forest. Forest Ecology and Management 225:3790-3796. Snaith, T.V., C.A. Chapman, J.M. Rothman, and M.D. Wasserman. 2008. Bigger groups have fewer parasites and similar cortisol

levels: a multi-group analysis in red colobus monkeys. American Journal of Primatology 70:1-9. Aureli, F., C.M. Schffner, C. Boesch, S.K. Bearder, J. Call, C.A. Chapman, R. Connor, A. Di Fiore, R.I.M. Dunbar, S.P. Henzi, K.

Holekamp, A.H. Korstjens, R. Layton, P. Lee, J. Lehmann, J.H. Manson, G. Ramos-Fernandez, K.B. Strier, C.P., Van Schaik. 2008. Fission-fusion dynamics: new research frameworks. Current Anthropology 49:627-654.

Gillespie, T.R. and C.A. Chapman. 2008. Forest fragmentation, the decline of an endangered primate, and changes in host-parasite

interactions relative to an unfragmented forest. American Journal of Primatology 70:222-230. Rothman, J.M., C.A. Chapman and A.N. Pell. 2008. Fiber-bound nitrogen in gorilla diets: Implications for estimating dietary protein

intake of primates. American Journal of Primatology 70:690-694. Box, H., T.M. Butynski, C.A. Chapman, J.S. Lwanga J.F. Oates, R. Rudran, and P.M. Waser. 2008. Thomas T. Struhsaker recipient

of the Lifetime Achievement Award of the International Primatological Society 2006. International Journal of Primatology 29:13-19.

Chapman, C.A. T.L. Saj, and T.V. Snaith. 2007. Temporal dynamics of nutrition, parasitism, and stress in colobus monkeys:

implications for population regulation and conservation. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 134:240-250. Chapman, C.A., L. Naughton-Treves, M.J. Lawes, M.D. Wasserman, and T.R. Gillespie. 2007. The conservation value of forest

fragments: Explanations for population declines of the colobus of western Uganda. International Journal of Primatology 28:513-528.

Lawes, M.J., R. Joubert, M.E. Griffiths, S., Boudreau, and C.A. Chapman. 2007. The effect of the spatial scale of recruitment on tree

diversity in Afromontane forest fragments. Biological Conservation 139:447-456. Snaith, T.V. and C.A. Chapman. 2007. Primate group size and socioecological models: Do folivores really play by different rules?

Evolutionary Anthropology 16:94-106. Houle, A., C.A. Chapman, and W.L. Vickery 2007. Intratree variation in fruit production and implication for primate foraging.

International Journal of Primatology 28:1197-1217. Goldberg, T.L. T.R. Gillespie, I.B. Rwego, E.R. Wheeler, E.L. Estoff, and C.A. Chapman. 2007. Patterns of gastrointestinal bacterial

exchange between chimpanzees and humans involved in research and tourism in western Uganda. Biological Conservation 135:511-517.

Saj, T.L., S. Marteinson, P. Sicotte, and C.A. Chapman. 2007. Controversy over the application of current socioecological theory to

folivorous primates: Colobus vellerosus fits the predictions. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 133:994-1003. Arlet, M., F. Molleman, and C.A. Chapman. 2007. Indications for female mate choice in grey-cheeked mangabeys L. albigena

johnstoni in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Acta Ethologica 10:89-95. Harris T.R., and C.A. Chapman. 2007. Variation in the diet and ranging behavior of black-and-white colobus monkeys: Implications

for theory and conservation. Primates 48:208-221. Bradley, B.J., M. Stiller, D.M. Doran-Sheehy, T. Harris, C.A. Chapman, L. Vigilant, H. Poinar 2007. Plant DNA sequences from feces:

Potential means for assessing diets of wild animals. American Journal of Primatology 69:699-705. Chapman, C.A., and S.E. Russo. 2007. Primate seed dispersal: Linking behavioural ecology and forest community structure. In:

Campbell, C.J., A.F. Fuentes, K.C. MacKinnon, M. Panger, and S. Bearder (Eds.). Primates in Perspective. Oxford University Press. Pp. 510-525.

Twinomugisha, D. and C.A. Chapman. 2007. Golden monkey populations decline despite improved protection in Mgahinga Gorilla

National Park, Uganda. African Journal of Ecology 45:220-224. Chapman, C.A., M.D. Wasserman, T.R. Gillespie, M.L. Speirs, M.J. Lawes, T.L. Saj, and T.E. Ziegler. 2006. Do nutrition, parasitism,

and stress have synergistic effects on red colobus populations living in forest fragments? American Journal of Physical Anthropology 131:525-534.

Chapman, C.A., M.J. Lawes, H.A.C. Eeley. 2006. What hope for African primate diversity? African Journal of Ecology 44:1-18.

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Naughton, L., D.M. Kammen, C.A. Chapman. 2006. Burning biodiversity: Woody biomass use by commercial and subsistence

groups in western Uganda. Biological Conservation 134:232-241. Houle, A, W.L. Vickery, and C.A. Chapman. 2006. Mechanisms of coexistence among two species of frugivorous primates. Journal

of Animal Ecology 75:1034-1044. Rode, K.D., C.A. Chapman, L.R. McDowell, and C. Stickler. 2006. The role of nutrition in population regulation: A comparison of

redtail monkeys diets and densities across habitats and logging intensities. Biotropica 38:625-634. Butynski T & Members of the Primate Specialist Group. 2006. Colobus guereza. In: IUCN 2006. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened

Species. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Worman, C.O. and C.A. Chapman. 2006. Densities of two frugivorous primates with respect to forest and fragment tree species

composition and fruit availability. International Journal of Primatology 27:203-225. Twinomugisha, D., C.A. Chapman, M.J. Lawes, C. Worman, and L. Danish. 2006. How does the golden monkey of the Virungas cope

in a fruit scarce environment? E. Newton-Fisher, H. Notman, V. Reynolds, J.D. Patterson (eds.). Primates of Western Uganda. Pp. 45-60. Springer, New York.

Chapman, C.A., M.D. Wasserman, and T.R. Gillespie. 2006. Behavioural patterns of colobus in logged and unlogged forests: The

conservation value of harvested forests. E. Newton-Fisher, H. Notman, V. Reynolds, J.D. Patterson (eds.). Primates of Western Uganda. Pp. 373-390. Springer, New York.

Olupot, W. and C.A. Chapman. 2006. Human encroachment and vegetation change in isolated forest reserves: The case study of

Bwindi impenetrable National Park, Uganda. In: W.F. Laurance, and C. Peres (eds.). Emerging Threats to Tropical Forests, University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Pp. 127-142.

Rode, K. D., P. I. Chiyo, C. A. Chapman, and L. R. McDowell. 2006. Nutritional ecology of elephants in Kibale National Park, Uganda

and its relationship with crop-raiding behaviour. Journal of Tropical Ecology 22:1-9. Gillespie, T.R. and C.A. Chapman. 2006. Prediction of parasite infection dynamics in primate metapopulations based on attributes of

forest fragmentation. Conservation Biology 20:441-448. Lawes, M.J. and C.A. Chapman. 2006. Does the herb Acanthus pubescens and / or elephants suppress tree regeneration in

disturbed Afrotropical forests? Forest Ecology and Management 221:274-284. Chapman, C.A. M.L. Speirs, T.R. Gillespie, T. Holland, K.M. Austad. 2006. Life on the edge: Gastrointestinal parasites from forest

edge and interior primate groups. American Journal of Primatology 68:397-409. Danish, L., C.A. Chapman, M.B. Hall, K.D. Rode, and C.O. Worman. 2006. The role of sugar in diet selection in redtail and red

colobus monkeys. In: G. Hohmann, M.M. Robbins, and C. Boesch (eds), Feeding Ecology in Apes and Other Primate: Ecological, Physical, and Behavioral aspects. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge pp.471-485.

Chapman, C.A., T.R. Gillespie, and T.L. Goldberg. 2005. Primates and the ecology of their infectious diseases: How will

anthropogenic change affect host-pathogen interactions? Evolutionary Anthropology 14:134-144. Karesh, W. and C.A. Chapman. 2005. Ebola: A crisis and wake-up call for better understanding of reservoirs and transmission

routes. Evolutionary Anthropology 14:140. Snaith, T.V., and C.A. Chapman. 2005. Towards an ecological solution to the folivores paradox: Patch depletion as an indicator of

within-group scramble competition in red colobus monkeys. Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology 59:185-190. Chapman, C.A., T.R. Gillespie, M.L. Speirs. 2005. Parasite prevalence and richness in sympatric Colobines: Effects of host density.

American Journal of Primatology 67:259-266. Chapman, C.A., T.T. Struhsaker, and J.E. Lambert. 2005. Thirty years of research in Kibale National Park, Uganda, reveals a

complex picture for conservation. International Journal of Primatology 26:539-555. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, A.E. Zanne, J.R. Poulsen, C.J. Clark. 2005. A 12-year phenological record of fruiting: Implications

for frugivore populations and indicators of climate change. In: J.L. Dew and J. P. Boubli (eds.). Tropical Fruits and Frugivores. Springer, The Netherlands. Pp. 75.92.

Chapman, C.A. T. Webb, R. Fronstin, M.D. Wasserman, and A.M. Santamaria. 2005. Assessing dietary protein of colobus monkeys

through fecal sample analysis: A tool to evaluate habitat quality. African Journal of Ecology 43:276-278. Pavelka, M.S.M. and C.A. Chapman. 2005. Population Structure of Black Howlers (Alouatta pigra) in Southern Belize and

Responses to Hurricane Iris In: A. Estrada, P. Garber, M.S.M. Pavelka (eds.), New Perspectives in Mesoamerican Primatology: Distribution, Ecology, Behavior, and Conservation. Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects. Pp. 143-163. Kluwer Academic Press.

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Burgess, M.A. and C.A. Chapman. 2005. Tree leaf chemical characters: Selective pressures by folivorous primates and

invertebrates. African Journal of Ecology 43:242-250. Chapman, C.A. and M.S.M. Pavelka. 2005. Group size in folivorous primates: Ecological constraints and the possible influence of

social factors. Primates 46:1-9. Worman, C.O. and C.A. Chapman. 2005. Seasonal variation in a tropical ripe fruit quality and the response of three frugivores.

Journal of Tropical Ecology 21:689-697. Campbell, C.J., F. Aureli, C.A. Chapman, G. Ramos-Fernandez, K. Matthews, S.E. Russo, S. Suarez, and L. Vick. 2005. Terrestrial

behavior of spider monkeys (Ateles spp.): A comparative study. International Journal of Primatology 26:1039-1051. Zanne, A.E., C.A. Chapman, and K. Kitajima. 2005. Evolutionary and ecological correlates of early seedling morphology in East

African trees and shrubs. American Journal of Botany 92:972-978. Zanne, A.E, and C.A. Chapman. 2005. Diversity of woody species in forest, treefall gaps, and edge in Kibale National Park, Uganda.

Plant Ecology 178:121-139. Gillespie, T.R., C.A. Chapman, and E.C. Greiner. 2005. Affects of logging on gastrointestinal parasite infections and infection risk in

African primates. Journal of Applied Ecology 42:699-707. Gillespie, T.R., E.C. Greiner, and C.A. Chapman. 2005. Gastrointestinal parasites of the colobus monkeys of Uganda. Journal of

Parasitology. 91:569-573. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, T.T. Struhsaker, A.E. Zanne, C.J. Clark, and J.R. Poulsen. 2005. A long-term evaluation of fruit

phenology: Importance of climate change. Journal of Tropical Ecology 21:35-45. Lambert, J.E. and C.A. Chapman. 2005. The fate of primate dispersed seeds: Deposition pattern, dispersal distance, and

implications for conservation. In: P.M. Forget, J.E. Lambert, P. Hulme, and S. Vander Wall (eds.). Seed Fate: Predation, Dispersal and Seedling Establishment. Pp. 137-150. CAB International Publishers.

Chapman, L.J., K. Schneider, C.K. Apodaca, and C.A. Chapman. 2004. Respiratory ecology of macroinvertebrates in a swamp-river

system of East Africa. Biotropica 36:572-585. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 2004. Unfavorable successional pathways and the conservation value of logged tropical forest.

Biodiversity and Conservation 13:2089-2105. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, L. Naughton-Treves, M.J. Lawes, and L.R. McDowell. 2004. Predicting folivorous primate

abundance: Validation of a nutrition model. American Journal of Primatology 62:55-69. Gillespie, T.R., E.C. Greiner, and C.A. Chapman. 2004. Gastrointestinal parasites of the guenons of western Uganda. Journal of

Parasitology. 90:1356-1360. Lambert, J.E., C.A. Chapman, R.W. Wrangham, N.L. Conklin-Brittain. 2004. The hardness of cercopithecine foods: implications for

the critical function of enamel thickness in exploiting fallback foods. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 125:363-368. Paul, J.R., A.M. Randle, C.A. Chapman, and L.J. Chapman. 2004. Arrested succession in logging gaps: Is tree seedling growth and

survival limiting? African Journal of Ecology 42:245-251. Olowo, J.P., L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, R. Ogutu-Ohwayo. 2004. The distribution and feeding ecology of the characid Brycinus

sadleri in Lake Nabugabo, Uganda: Implications for persistence with Nile perch (Lates niloticus). African Journal of Aquatic Science 29:13-23.

Houle, A., C.A. Chapman, and W. Vickery. 2004. Tree climbing strategies for primate ecological studies. International Journal of

Primatology 25:237-260. Lawes, M.J., J.J. Midgley, and C.A. Chapman. 2004. South Africa's forests: The ecology and sustainable use of indigenous timber

resources. In: Indigenous Forests and Woodlands in South Africa: Policy, People and Practice. M.J. Lawes, H.A.C. Eeley, C.M. Shackleton, and B.G.S. Geach (eds.) pp. 31-75. University of KwaZulu-Natal Press, Pietermaritzburg. 896 p.

Seehausen, O., E. Koetsier, M.V. Schneider, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, M.E. Knight, G.F. Turner, J.J.M. van Alphen, R. Bills.

2003. Nuclear markers reveal unexpected genetic variation and a Congolese-Nilotic origin of the Lake Victoria cichlid species flock. Proceedings of the Royal Society London 270:129-137.

Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, J.P. Olowo, P.J. Schofield, L.S. Kaufman, O. Seehausen, and R. Ogutu-Ohwayo. 2003. Fish faunal

resurgence in Lake Nabugabo, East Africa. Conservation Biology 17:500-511. Balcomb, S.R, and C.A. Chapman. 2003. Bridging the seed dispersal gap: Consequences of seed deposition for seedling

recruitment in primate-tree interactions. Ecological Monographs 73:625-642.

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Wasserman, M.D. and C.A. Chapman. 2003. Determinants of colobus monkey abundance: The importance of food energy, protein,

and fiber content. Journal of Animal Ecology 72:650-659. Balirwa, J.S., C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, K. Geheb, L. Kaufman, R.H. Lowe-McConnell, O. Seehausen, J.H. Wanink, R.L.

Welcomme, and F. Witte. 2003. Biodiversity and Fisheries Sustainability in the Lake Victoria Basin: An Unexpected Marriage? Bioscience 53:703-715.

Rode, K.D., C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, and L.R. McDowell. 2003. Mineral resource availability and consumption by colobus in

Kibale National Park, Uganda. International Journal of Primatology 24:541-573. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, K. Vulinec, A. Zanne, and M.J. Lawes. 2003. Fragmentation and alteration to seed dispersal

processes: An initial evaluation of dung beetles, seed fate, and seedling diversity. Biotropica 35:382-393. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, K.D. Rode, E.M. Hauck, and L.R. McDowell. 2003. Variation in the nutritional value of primate foods:

Among trees, time periods, and areas. International Journal of Primatology 24:317-333. Duncan, R.S., and C.A. Chapman. 2003. Consequences of plantation harvest during tropical forest restoration in Uganda. Forest

Ecology and Management 173:235-250. Duncan, R.S. and C.A. Chapman. 2003. Tree-shrub interactions during early forest succession in Uganda. Restoration Ecology

11:198-207. Yeager, C.P., A.J. Marshall, C.M. Stickler, and C.A. Chapman. 2003. Effects of forest fires on peat swamp and lowland dipterocarp

forests in Kalimantan, Indonesia. Tropical Biodiversity 8:121-138. Crisman, T.L., L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and L.S. Kaufman editors. 2003. Conservation, ecology, and management of African

freshwaters. (Edited Volume) University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, T.L. Crisman, and L.S. Kaufman. 2003. Conservation and management of African aquatic

ecosystems: An introduction. In: Conservation, Ecology, and Management of African Freshwaters. Pp. 1-6. T.L. Crisman, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and L.S. Kaufman editors. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida .

Chapman, L.J. and C.A. Chapman. 2003. Fishes of the African rain forests: Emerging and potential threats to a little-known fauna.

In: Conservation, Ecology, and Management of African Freshwaters. Pp. 176-209. T.L. Crisman, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and L.S. Kaufman editors. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.

Crisman, T.L., L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman. 2003. Incorporating wetlands and their ecotones in the conservation and management

of freshwater ecosystems of Africa. In: Conservation, Ecology, and Management of African Freshwaters. Pp. 210-228. T.L. Crisman, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and L.S. Kaufman editors. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.

Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 2003. Deforestation in tropical Africa: Impacts on aquatic ecosystems. In: Conservation,

Ecology, and Management of African Freshwaters. Pp. 229-246. T.L. Crisman, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and L.S. Kaufman editors. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.

Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, T.L. Crisman, and L.S. Kaufman. 2003. Conservation and management of African inland waters: A

synthesis. In: Conservation, Ecology, and Management of African Freshwaters. Pp. 474-488. T.L. Crisman, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and L.S. Kaufman editors. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.

Twinomugisha, D., G.I. Basuta, and C.A. Chapman. 2003. Status and ecology of the Golden Monkey (Cercopithecus mitis kandti) in

Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda. African Journal of Ecology 41:47-55. Chapman, C.A., M.J. Lawes, L. Naughton-Treves, and T.R. Gillespie. 2003. Primate survival in community-owned forest fragments:

Are metapopulation models useful amidst intensive use? In: Primates in Fragments: Ecology and Conservation. L.K. Marsh (editor), pages 63-78. Kluwer Academic /Plenum Publishers, New York.

Marsh, L.K., C.A. Chapman, M. Norconk, J. Wallis, and G. Umapathy, J.C. Bicca-Marques, K. Gilbert, S. Ferarri, S. Scott. 2003.

Fragmentation: Specter of the future of the spirit of conservation? In: Primates in Fragments: Ecology and Conservation. L.K. Marsh (editor), pages 381-398. Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers, New York.

Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 2002. Foraging challenges of red colobus monkeys: Influence of nutrients and secondary

compounds. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 133:861-875. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, F.G. Nordlie and A.E. Rosenberger. Physiological refugia: Swamps, hypoxia tolerance, and

maintenance fish biodiversity in the Lake Victoria region. 2002. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 133:421-437. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, and T.R. Gillespie. 2002. Scale issues in the study of primate foraging: Red colobus of Kibale

National Park. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 117:349-363.

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Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, K.A. Bjorndal, and D.A. Onderdonk. 2002. Application of protein to fiber ratios to predict colobine abundance on different spatial scales. International Journal of Primatology 23:283-310.

Naughton-Treves, L. and C.A. Chapman. 2002. Fuelwood resources and forest Regeneration on fallow land in Uganda. Journal of

Sustainable Forestry 14:19-32. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, A. Zanne, and M. Burgess. 2002. Does weeding promote regeneration of an indigenous tree

community in felled pine plantations in Uganda? Restoration Ecology 10:408-415. Zinabu, G.-M., L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. 2002. Conductivity as a predictor of total cations and salinity in Ethiopian lakes and

rivers: Revisting earlier models. Limnologica 32:21-26. Osborne, T., L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, T.L. Crisman, J.P. Prenger, S. Nyguen, and E. Stecker. 2002. Invertebrate community

structure and oxygen availability in an intermittent stream/wetland system of the Ugandan uplands. International Association of Theoretical and Applied Limnology 27:3599-3603.

Duncan, R.S. and C.A. Chapman. 2002. Limitation of animal seed dispersal for enhancing forest succession on degraded lands. In:

Seed Dispersal and Frugivory: Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation. D. Levey, W.R. Silva and M. Galetti (eds.). CAB International Press, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK. Pp. 437-450.

Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 2002. Plant-animal coevolution: Is it thwarted by spatial and temporal variation in animal

foraging. In: Seed Dispersal and Frugivory: Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation. D. Levey, W.R. Silva and M. Galetti (eds.). CAB International Press, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK. Pp. 275-290.

Chapman, L.J. and C.A. Chapman. 2002. Tropical forest degradation and aquatic ecosystems: Our current state of knowledge. In:

Freshwater Fish Conservation: Options for the Future. Blackwell Science, London, England. Pp 237-249. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, M. Cords, M. Gauthua, A. Gautier-Hion, J.E. Lambert, K.D. Rode, C.E.G. Tutin, and L.J.T. White.

2002. Variation in the diets of Cercopithecus Species: Differences within forests, among forests, and across species. In: The Guenons: Diversity and Adaptation in African Monkeys. M. Glenn and M. Cords editors. Plenum Press, New York. Pp. 319-344.

Chapman, C.A. and C. Peres. 2001. Primate conservation in the new millennium: The role of scientists. Evolutionary Anthropology

10:16-33. Gillespie, T.R. and C.A. Chapman. 2001. Determinants of group size in the red colobus monkey (Procolobus badius): An evaluation

of the generality of the ecological constraints model. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 50:329-338. Zanne, A.E. and C.A. Chapman. 2001. Expediting indigenous regeneration in African grasslands: Plantations and the effects of

distance and isolation from seed sources. Ecological Applications 11:1610-1621. Zanne, A.E., B. Keith, C.A. Chapman, and L.J. Chapman. 2001. Protecting terrestrial mammal communities: Potential role of pine

plantations. African Journal of Ecology 39:399-401. Crisman, T.L., L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and J. Prenger. 2001. Cultural eutrophication of a Ugandan highland crater lake: A

twenty-five year comparison of limnological parameters. International Association of Theoretical and Applied Limnology 27:3574-3578.

Chapman, L.J., J. Balirwa, F.W.B. Bugenyi, C.A. Chapman, and T.L. Crisman. 2001. Wetlands of East Africa: Biodiversity,

exploitation, and policy perspectives. Pp. 101-132. (In). B. Gopal, W.J. Junk, and J.A. Davis (editors) Biodiversity in Wetlands: Assessment, Function, and Conservation. Volume 2. Backhuys Publisher, Leiden.

Chapman, C.A. and R. Fimbel. 2001. An evolutionary perspective on natural disturbance and logging: Implications for forest

management. In: R. Fimbel, A. Grajal, & J. Robinson (eds). The Cutting Edge. Pp. 511-522. Columbia University Press, New York.

Chapman, C.A., S.R. Balcomb, T. Gillespie, J. Skorupa, and T.T. Struhsaker. 2000. Long-term effects of logging on African primate

communities: A 28 year comparison from Kibale National Park, Uganda. Conservation Biology 14:207-217. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 2000. Interdemic variation in mixed-species association patterns: Common diurnal primates of

Kibale National Park, Uganda. Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology 47:129-139. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 2000. Constraints on group size in redtail monkeys and red colobus: Testing the generality of the

ecological constraints model. International Journal of Primatology 21:565-585. Onderdonk, D.A. and C.A. Chapman. 2000. Coping with forest fragmentation: The primates of Kibale National Park, Uganda.

International Journal of Primatology 21:587-611. Chapman, L.J., C. A. Lanciani, and C.A. Chapman. 2000. Ecology of a diplozoon parasite on the gills of the African cyprinid Barbus

neumayeri. African Journal of Ecology 38:312-320.

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Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, T.L. Crisman, and J. Prenger. 2000. Predictors of seasonal oxygen levels in a Ugandan swamp/river

system: A 3-year profile. International Association of Theoretical and Applied Limnology 27:3048-3053. Walsh, S.J., L.J. Chapman, A.E. Rosenberger, and C.A. Chapman. 2000. Redescription and ecology of Amphilius jacksonii

(Siluriformes: Amphiliidae), a hillstream catfish of Western Uganda. Ichthyological Exploration of Freshwaters 11:163-177. Janson, C.H. and C.A. Chapman. 2000. Resources and the determination of primate community structure. Primate Communities, Pp.

237-267. J.G. Fleagle, C.H. Janson, and K. Reed (eds). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 2000. Determinants of group size in social primates: The importance of travel costs. On the

Move: How and Why Animals Travel in Groups, Pp. 24-42. S. Boinski and P.A. Garber (eds). University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Boinski, S., A. Treves, and C.A. Chapman. 2000. A critical evaluation of the influence of predators on primates: Effects on group

travel. On the Move: How and Why Animals Travel in Groups, Pp. 24-42. S. Boinski and P.A. Garber (eds). University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Balcomb, S.R., C.A. Chapman, and R.W. Wrangham. 2000. Relationship between chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) density and large,

fleshy-fruit tree density: Conservation implications. American Journal of Primatology 51:197-203. Gebo, D.L. and C.A. Chapman. 2000. Locomotor behavior in Ugandan monkeys. Old World Monkeys, Pp. 480-495. P.F.

Whitehead and C.J. Jolly (eds.). Cambridge University Press, New York. Chapman, C.A. and J.E. Lambert. 2000. Habitat alteration and the conservation of African primates: A case study of Kibale National

Park, Uganda. American Journal of Primatology 50:169-186. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1999. Forest restoration in abandoned agricultural land: A case study from East Africa.

Conservation Biology 13:1301-1311. Chapman, C.A., A. Gautier-Hion, J.F. Oates, and D.A. Onderdonk. 1999. African primate communities: Determinants of structure

and threats to survival. Primate Communities, Pp. 1-37. J.G. Fleagle, C.H. Janson, and K. Reed (eds). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England.

Chapman, C.A., R.W. Wrangham, L.J. Chapman, D.K. Kennard, and A.E. Zanne. 1999. Fruit and flower phenology at two sites in

Kibale National Park, Uganda. Journal of Tropical Ecology 15:189-211. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, D. Brazeau, B. McGlaughlin, M. Jordan. 1999. Papyrus swamps and faunal diversification:

Geographical variation among populations of the African cyprinid Barbus neumayeri. Journal of Fish Biology 54:310-327. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1999. Implications of small scale variation in ecological conditions for the diet and density of red

colobus monkeys. Primates 40:215-232. Duncan, R.S. and C.A. Chapman 1999. Seed dispersal and potential forest succession in abandoned agriculture in tropical Africa.

Ecological Applications 9:998-1008. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, L. Kaufman, and A.E. Zanne. 1999. Potential causes of arrested succession in Kibale National Park:

Growth and mortality of seedlings. African Journal of Ecology 37:81-92. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, and T.L. Crisman. 1998. Limnological observations of a papyrus swamp in Uganda: Implications for

fish faunal structure and diversity. Verhandlungen Internationale Vereinigung Limnologie Vol. 26:1821-1826. Chapman, C.A. and S.R. Balcomb. 1998. Population characteristics of howlers: Ecological conditions or group history. International

Journal of Primatology 19:385-403. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, T.L. Crisman, and F.G. Nordlie. 1998. Dissolved oxygen and thermal regimes of a Ugandan crater

lake. Hydrobiologia 385: 201-221. Naughton-Treves, L., A. Treves, C.A. Chapman, R. Wrangham. 1998. Temporal patterns of crop raiding by primates: Linking food

availability in croplands and adjacent forest. Journal of Applied Ecology 35:596-606. Crisman, T.L., L.J. Chapman, and C.A. Chapman. 1998. Predictors of seasonal oxygen levels in small Florida lakes: The importance

of color. Hydrobiologia 368:762-768. Olupot, W., P.M. Waser, and C.A. Chapman. 1998. Fruit finding by mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena): Are monitoring of fig trees

and assessing sympatric frugivore calls possible strategies? International Journal of Primatology 19:339-353. Chapman, C.A., L.S. Kaufman, and L.J. Chapman. 1998. Buttress formation and directional stress experienced during critical phases

of tree development. Journal of Tropical Ecology 14:341-350.

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Shepherd, V. and C.A. Chapman. 1998. Dung beetles as secondary seed dispersers: Impact on seed predation and germination. Journal of Tropical Ecology 14:199-216.

Chapman, L.J. and C.A. Chapman. 1998. Hypoxia tolerance of the mormyrid Petrocephalus catostoma: Implications for persistence

in swamp refugia. Copeia 1998:762-768. Chapman, C.A. and D.A. Onderdonk. 1998. Forests without primates: Primate/plant codependency. American Journal of

Primatology 45:127-141. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1997. Forest regeneration in logged and unlogged forests of Kibale National Park, Uganda.

Biotropica 29:396-412. Kaufman, L.S., L.J. Chapman, and C.A. Chapman. 1997. Evolution in Fast Forward: Haplochromine Fishes of the Lake Victoria

Region. Endeavour 21:23-30. Hoogesteijn, R. and C.A. Chapman. 1997. Large scale ranches as conservation tools in the Venezuelan llanos. Oryx 37:274-284. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, R. Wrangham, G. Isabirye-Basuta, and K. Ben-David. 1997. Spatial and temporal variability in the

structure of a tropical forest. African Journal of Ecology 35:287-302. Olupot, W., C.A. Chapman, P.M. Waser, and G. Isabirye-Basuta. 1997. Mangabey (Cercocebus albigena) ranging patterns in relation

to fruit availability and the risk of parasite infection in Kibale National Park Uganda. American Journal of Primatology 43:65-78.

Nunes, A. and C.A. Chapman. 1997. A re-evaluation of factors influencing the sex ratio of spider monkey populations with new data

from Maraca Island, Brazil. Folia Primatologica 68:31-33. Hoogesteijn, R. and C.A. Chapman. 1997. Hatos ganaderos como herramientas de donservacion en los llanos Venezolanos. In: XIII

Cursillo Sobre Bovinos De Carne. D. Plasse, N. Pena de Borsotti, and R. Romero (eds.) Univ. Central de Venezuela, Maracay, Venezuela.

Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, R. Ogutu-Ohwayo, M. Chandler, L. Kaufman, and A. Keiter. 1996. Refugia for the endangered fish

fauna of Lake Nabugabo, Uganda. Conservation Biology 10:554-561. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1996. Frugivory and the fate of dispersed and non-dispersed seeds in six African tree species.

Journal of Tropical Ecology 12:491-504. Chapman, C.A., and L.J. Chapman. 1996. Mixed species primate groups in the Kibale Forest: Ecological constraints on association.

International Journal of Primatology 17:31-50. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, and M. Chandler. 1996. Wetland ecotones as refugia for endangered fishes. Biological Conservation

78:263-270. Treves, A. and C.A. Chapman. 1996. Conspecific threat, predation avoidance, and resource defense: Implications for grouping in

langurs. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 39:43-53. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1996. Exotic tree plantations and the regeneration of natural forests in Kibale National Park,

Uganda. Biological Conservation 76:253-257. Crisman, T.L., L.J. Chapman, and C.A. Chapman. 1996. Conserving tropical wetlands through sustainable use. Geotimes July

1996:23-25. Wrangham, R.W., C.A. Chapman, A.P. Clark-Arcadi and G. Isabirye-Basuta. 1996. Social ecology of Kanyawara chimpanzees:

Implications for the costs of great ape groups. The Great Apes Revisited. Pp. 45-57. W.C. McGrew, L.F. Marchant, and T. Nishida (eds.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Kaufman, L., C.A. Chapman and L. J. Chapman. 1996. The great lakes. In: East African Ecosystems and Their Conservation. Pp.

191-216. T.R. McClanahan and T.P. Young (eds.). Oxford University Press, New York. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1996. Mid-elevation forests: A history of disturbance and regeneration. East African Ecosystems

and Their Conservation. Pp. 385-400. T.R. McClanahan and T.P. Young (eds.). Oxford University Press, New York. Chapman, C.A., R. Wrangham, and L.J. Chapman. 1995. Ecological constraints on group size: An analysis of spider monkey and

chimpanzee subgroups. Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology 36:59-70. Chapman, L.J. L.S. Kaufman, C.A. Chapman, and F.E. McKenzie. 1995. Hypoxia tolerance in twelve species of East African cichlids:

Potential for low oxygen refugia in Lake Victoria. Conservation Biology 9:1274-1288. Chapman, C.A. and L. J. Chapman. 1995. Survival without dispersers?: Seedling recruitment under parents. Conservation Biology

9:675-678.

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Chapman, C.A. 1995. Primate seed dispersal: Coevolution and conservation implications. Evolutionary Anthropology 4:74-82. Gebo, D.L. and C.A. Chapman. 1995. Habitat, annual, and seasonal effects on positional behavior in red colobus monkeys.

American Journal of Physical Anthropology 96:73-82. Gebo, D.L. and C.A. Chapman. 1995. Positional behaviour in five species of old world monkeys. American Journal of Physical

Anthropology 97:49-76. Chandler, M., L.J. Chapman, and C.A. Chapman. 1995. Patchiness in the abundance of metacercariae parasitizing Poecilia gillii

isolated in pools of an intermittent tropical stream. Environmental Biology of Fishes 42:313-321. Boinski, S. and C.A. Chapman. 1995. Predation on primates: Where are we and what next? Evolutionary Anthropology 4:1-3. Chapman, C.A., R. Wrangham, and L.J. Chapman. 1994. Indices of habitat-wide fruit abundance in tropical forests. Biotropica

26:160-171. Wrangham, R.W., C.A. Chapman, and L.J. Chapman. 1994. Seed dispersal by forest chimpanzees in Uganda. Journal of Tropical

Ecology 10:355-368. White, F. and C.A. Chapman. 1994. Contrasting chimpanzees and pygmy chimpanzees: Nearest neighbor distances and choices.

Folia Primatologica 63:181-191. Olupot, W. C.A. Chapman, C. Brown and P. Waser. 1994. Mangabey (Cercocebus albigena) population density, group size, and

ranging: A twenty-year comparison. American Journal of Primatology 32:197-205. Chapman, L.J. and C.A. Chapman. 1994. Observations on synchronous air-breathing in Clarias liocephalus. Copeia 1994:246-249. Chapman, L.J., L. Kaufman, and C.A. Chapman. 1994. Why swim upside down?: A comparative study of two mochokid catfishes.

Copeia 1994:130-135. Gebo, D.L., C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, and J. Lambert. 1994. Locomotory response to predator threat in red colobus. Primates

35:219-223. Chapman, C.A., F.J. White, and R. Wrangham. 1994. Party size in chimpanzees and bonobos: A reevaluation of theory based on

two similarly forested sites. In: R.W. Wrangham, W.C. McGrew, F.B. de Waal and P.G. Heltne (eds.). Chimpanzee Cultures. Pp.41-58. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.

Wrangham, R.W., J. Gittleman, and C.A. Chapman. 1993. Constraints on group size in primates and carnivores: Population density

and day-range as assays of exploitation competition. Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology 32:199-210. Fischer, K. and C.A. Chapman. 1993. Frugivores and fruit syndromes: Differences in patterns at the genus and species levels. Oikos

66:472-482. Chapman, C.A. and R.W. Wrangham. 1993. Range use of the forest chimpanzees of Kibale: Implications for the evolution of

chimpanzee social organization. American Journal of Primatology 31:263-273. Chapman, L.J. and C.A. Chapman. 1993. Desiccation, flooding, and the behaviour of Poecilia gillii (Pisces: Poeciliidae).

Ichthyological Exploration of Freshwaters 4:279-287. Chapman, C.A., F.J. White, and R. Wrangham. 1993. Defining party size in fission-fusion social organizations. Folia Primatologia

61:31-34. Malenky, R.K., R. Wrangham, C.A. Chapman, and E.O. Vineberg. 1993. Measuring chimpanzee food abundance. Tropics 2:231-

244. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, R. Wrangham. 1993. Observations on the feeding biology and population ecology of the African Grey

Parrot. Scopus 16:27-35. Weisenseel, K., C.A. Chapman, and L.J. Chapman. 1993. Nocturnal primates of Kibale Forest: The effects of selective logging.

Primates 34:445-450. Chapman, L.J. and C.A. Chapman. 1993. Fish populations in tropical floodplain pools: A reevaluation of Holden's data on the River

Sokoto. Ecology of Freshwater Fishes 2:23-30. Grant, J., C.A. Chapman, and K. Richardson. 1992. Defended vs undefended home range size of mammals. Behavioural Ecology

and Sociobiology 31:149-161. Chapman, L.J., C.A. Chapman, R.W. Wrangham. 1992. Balanites wilsoniana: Elephant dependent dispersal. Journal of Tropical

Ecology 8:275-283.

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Chapman, L.J. and C.A. Chapman. 1992. Variation in the structure of Poecilia gillii populations. Copeia 1992:908-913. Butynski, T., C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, and D. Weary. 1992. Use of male blue monkey pyow calls for long-term individual

identification. American Journal of Primatology 28:183-190. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, R. Wrangham, K. Hunt D. Gebo, and L Gardner. 1992. Estimators of fruit abundance of tropical

trees. Biotropica 24:527-531. Vickery, W., L-A. Giraldeau, J. Templeton, D. Kramer, C.A. Chapman. 1991. Producers, scroungers, and group foraging. American

Naturalist 137:847-863. Wrangham, R.W., N.L. Conklin, C.A. Chapman, and K. Hunt. 1991. The significance of fibrous foods for Kibale Forest chimpanzees.

Phil Trans. Royal Society London (B). 334:171-178. Glander, K., L.M. Fedigan, L. Fedigan, and C.A. Chapman. 1991. Field methods for capture and measurement of three monkey

species in Costa Rica. Folia Primatologica 57:70-82. Chapman, C.A. 1991. Reproductive biology of captive capybaras. Journal of Mammalogy 72:206-208. Robbins, D., C.A. Chapman, and R. Wrangham. 1991. Why are gibbons not more like spider monkeys? Primates 32:301-305. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1991. The foraging itinerary of spider monkeys: When to eat leaves? Folia Primatologica

56:162-166. Chapman, L.J., D.L. Kramer, and C.A. Chapman. 1991. Population dynamics of the fish Poecilia gillii in pools of an intermittent

tropical stream. Journal of Animal Ecology 60:441-453. Chapman, C.A. and D. Weary. 1990. The possibility of individual recognition of vocalizations by spider monkeys. American Journal

of Primatology 22:279-284. Chapman, C.A. 1990. Association patterns of male and female spider monkeys: The influence of ecology and sex on social

organization. Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology 26:409-414. Chapman, C.A. and L.M. Fedigan. 1990. Dietary differences between neighboring cebus monkey groups: Local tradition or

responses to food availability? Folia Primatologica 54:177-186. Chapman, C.A. and L. Lefebvre. 1990. Manipulating foraging group size: Spider monkey food calls at fruiting trees. Animal

Behaviour 39:891-896. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, and L. Lefebvre. 1990. Spider monkey alarm calls: Honest advertisement or warning kin. Animal

Behaviour 39:197-198. Chapman, C.A., S. Walker, and L. Lefebvre. 1990. Reproductive strategies of primates: The influence of body size and diet on litter

size. Primates 31:1-13. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1990. Density and growth rate of some tropical dry forest trees: Comparisons between

successional forest types. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 117:226-231. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1990. Dietary variability in primate populations. Primates 31:121-128. Chapman, C.A. 1989. Ecological constraints on group size in three species of neotropical primates. Folia Primatologica 73:1-9. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, and L. Lefebvre. 1989. Variability in parrot flock size: Possible functions of communal roosts.

Condor 91:842-847. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, and K. Richardson. 1989. Sex ratio in primates: A test of the local resource competition hypothesis.

Oikos 56:132-134. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1990. Reproductive biology of captive and free-ranging spider monkeys. Zoo Biology 9:1-10. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, and R. McLaughlin. 1989. Multiple central place foraging in spider monkeys: Consequences of using

many sleeping sites. Oecologia 79:506-511. Chapman, C.A. 1989. Spider monkey sleeping sites: Implications for primate group structure. American Journal of Primatology

18:53-60. Chapman, C.A., L.M. Fedigan, L.M. Fedigan, and L.J. Chapman. 1989. Post-weaning resource competition and sex ratios in spider

monkeys. Oikos 54:315-319.

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Chapman, C.A. 1989. Primate seed dispersal: The fate of dispersed seeds. Biotropica 21:148-153. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, and K.E. Glander. 1989. Primate populations in northwestern Costa Rica: Potential for recovery.

Primate Conservation 10:37-44. Fedigan, L.M., L. Fedigan, C.A. Chapman, and K. Glander. 1988. Spider monkey home ranges: A comparison of radio telemetry and

direct observations. American Journal of Primatology 16:19-29. Chapman, C.A., L.M. Fedigan, and L. Fedigan. 1988. A comparison of transect methods of estimating population density of Costa

Rican primates. Brenesia 30:67-80. Chapman, C.A. 1988. Patch use and patch depletion by the spider and howling monkeys of Santa Rosa National Park, Costa Rica.

Behaviour 105:99-116. Chapman, C.A. 1988. Patterns of foraging and range use by three species of neotropical primates. Primates 29:177-194. Chapman, C.A. 1987. Flexibility in diets of three species of Costa Rican Primates. Folia Primatologica 49:90-105. Chapman, C.A., L. Fedigan, and L. Fedigan. 1987. Ecological and demographic influences on the pattern of association in a group of

St. Kitts vervets. Primates 29:417-421. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1987. Social responses to the traumatic injury of a juvenile spider monkey. Primates 28:271-275. Chapman, C.A. 1987. Selection of secondary growth areas by vervet monkeys. American Journal of Primatology 12:217-221. Chapman, C.A. and L.J. Chapman. 1986. Development of howling monkey twins (Alouatta palliata) in Santa Rosa National Park,

Costa Rica. Primates 27:377-381. Fedigan, L.M., L. Fedigan, and C.A. Chapman. 1986. A census of Alouatta palliata and Cebus capucinus in Santa Rosa National

Park, Costa Rica. Brenesia 23:309-322. Chapman, C.A. 1986. Boa constrictor predation and group response in white-faced cebus monkeys. Biotropica 18:171-172. Chapman, C.A. 1986. Distribution of tropical rain forest primates. Current Perspectives in Primate Social Dynamics. Pp.194-205. D.

Taub and F. King (eds.), Nostrand Reinhold, New York. Chapman, C.A. 1985. The influence of habitat on behaviour in a group of St. Kitts Green Monkeys. Journal of Zoology 206:311-320. Fedigan, L.M., L. Fedigan, C.A. Chapman, and M.T. McGuire. 1985. A demographic model of colonization by a population of St. Kitts

vervets. Folia Primatologica 42:194-202. Chapman, C.A. and L.M. Fedigan. 1984. Territoriality in the St. Kitts Vervet. Journal of Human Evolution 13:677-686. Chapman, C.A. and W.C. Mackay. 1984. Direct observation of habitat use by Northern Pike. Copeia 1984:255-258. Chapman, C.A. and W. Mackay. 1984. Versatility of habitat use by a top aquatic predator. Journal of Fish Biology 25:109-116. Chapman, C.A. 1984. Speciation of tropical rain forest primates of Africa: Insular biogeography. African Journal of Ecology 21:297-

308. Popular Articles Smith, L., A. Reid, L. Chapman, and C.A. Chapman. 2013. Lake Nabugabo Research History (BOOK). Blurb Press, Toronto. Hoogesteijn, R. and C.A. Chapman. 1998. Hatos ganaderos como herramienta de conservacion en los llanos. Parts I,II,II Venezuela

Bovina 13(37):29-33, 13(38):35-38, 13(39):21-24, 14 (40):32-39. Hoogesteijn, R. and C.A. Chapman. 1998. Hatos ganaderos como Centros de conservacion en los llanos Venezolanos. Natura

113:12-18. Lambert, J.E. C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman. 1998. The status of red colobus (Procolobus badius) populations in regenerating areas

of Kibale National Park, Uganda. American Society of Primatology Newsletter Fall 22:10. Chapman, C.A., L.J. Chapman, and R.W. Wrangham. 1991. Ugandan elephants help maintain a useful tree. Agroforestry Today

3(3):15. Johns, A., L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman. A field station profile: Makerere Univ. Biological Field Station. Tropinet (Fall) 1991. Chapman, C.A. and K. Glander. 1989. The monkeys of Lomas Barbudal. Beeline 3:13. Book Reviews

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Review of G. Cowlishaw and R. Dunbar. 2001. Primate Conservation Biology. American Scientist 89:282-284. Review of Noel Rowe. 1996. The Pictorial Guide to The Living Primates. Quarterly Review of Biology 1998:73:85. Review of A. Glyn Davies and John F. Oates (editors). 1994. Colobine Monkeys: Their Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution Journal of

Mammalogy. 77:908-909. Review of N. Pyatt and J. Williams (editors). 1991. Tropical Forestry: Third World Priorities Versus Western Concerns. Proc. of the

1990 International Student Forestry Symposium. Univ. of Wales, Bangor. Ecology 74:973-974. Review of M. Wells and K. Brandon with L. Hannah. 1992. People and Parks: Linking Protected Area Management with Local

Communities. The World Bank, Washington. Ecology 74:974-975. Wildlife Use: A Step Towards Conservation. Review of J.G. Robinson, K.H. Redford. 1991. Neotropical Wildlife Use and Conservation.

University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Ecology 73:276-277. Media Features Jane Goodall Foundation http://janegoodallcanadablog.org/2013/09/05/what-does-a-canadian-primatologist-do/ Uganda Wildlife Authority Newsletter. National Geographic http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2013/11/06/exclusive-video-worlds-biggest-pig-revealed/?source=hp_dl1_ww-biggest-pig_20131107 McGill Reporter - November 2013 Theater performance at Mainline Theater on Primate Conservation - November 2013 Lectures and Oral Presentations International Symposium Organized Crater Lakes of Western Uganda: Conservation and Rural Development. July 2001. With L.J. Chapman Aquatic Conservation and Management in Africa, Gainesville, Florida. March 1999. With L.J. Chapman and T. Crisman. Keynote Presentations Climate change, conservation, and predicting the role of pathogens. D. Twinomugisha and C.A. Chapman. Albertine Rift

Conservation, Kigali, Rwanda, February 2011. Primate conservation: Could climate change play a direct or indirect role. P. Omeja and C.A. Chapman. Albertine Rift Conservation,

Kigali, Rwanda, February 2011. Challenges for ecology to balance theory & application: Examples from primate research. C.A. Chapman, Institute of Ecology, August

2010, Xalapa, Mexico. Primate conservation: Synergy among stress, nutrition, climate change, & disease. C.A. Chapman. Primate Society of Great Britain,

November 2009, London, England. Workshops Organized Global environmental change and primates, including human, health: towards an information-sharing network for health and education

centres. L. Spini and C.A. Chapman. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012.

International Invited Oral Presentations Management history affects tree diversity, biomass, and primate foods in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Jacob, A.L., P. Parker, M.J.

Lechowicz, and C.A. Chapman. Canadian Society of Ecology and Evolution. Kalowna, May 2013 The synergy between nutrition, stress, and disease as determinants of animal abundance. Chapman, C.A., T. Bonnell. Canadian

Society of Ecology and Evolution. Kalowna, May 2013. Discovery of novel and highly divergent SIVs in three wild monkey species in Kibale National Park, Uganda. William Switzer, Michael

Lauck, Anupama Shankar, David Hyeroba, Alex Tumukunde, Colin A. Chapman, Nelson Ting, Thomas Friedrich, David O’Connor, Tony Goldberg. Conference on retroviruses and opportunistic Investions March, Atlanta, March 2013.

Forest loss, agricultural intensification, and the islandization of protected areas in the African Albertine Rift. Hartter, J., M. Palace, S.

Ryan, J. Diem, C.A. Chapman. American Geographers, Los Angeles, January 2013.

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The ecology of human obesity: a comparative perspective. National Research Centre for Growth and Development. D.

Raubenheimer, J. Rothman, and C.A Chapman. Auckland, New Zealand, September 2011. Linking landscapes to disease: An agent-based model simulating the impact of forest composition on spread of disease in red colobus

populations. Geospatial Analysis and Modeling. Tyler Bonnell, Raja Sengupta, Colin A. Chapman and Tony Goldberg. Vancouver, Canada, August 2011.

How many monkeys does this forest feed? Patterns in forest succession following disturbance in Kibale National Park Uganda. A.

Jacob and C.A. Chapman. Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation. June 1011. Nutritional geometry: protein and energy in mountain gorilla diets. J.M. Rothman, D. Raubenheimer, C.A. Chapman. American

Association of Physical Anthropologists, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 2011. Nutritional balancing acts: new insights into the foraging decisions of wild primates. J.M. Rothman, C.A. Chapman, D. Raubenheimer.

13th International Behavioral Ecology Congress. September 2010, Perth, Australia. Hartter, J., Ryan, S.J., Southworth, J., Goldman, A.C., Binford, M.W., and C.A. Chapman. 2010. Fortresses and fragments: Impacts of

fragmentation in a forest park landscape. IUFRO Landscape Ecology International Conference. September 21-27, 2010. Bragança, Portugal.

Errores mas communes en la evaluacion de los efectos de la fragmentacion del habitat sobre lost primates. V.A. Rodriguez, E.

Cuesta, S. Mandujano, C.A. Chapman, and R. Reyna-Hurtado. September 2010, Guanajuato, Mexico. Megafaunal losses: when does a forest become functionally empty? G. O’Farril, C.A. Chapman, and A. Gonzalez. Conservation

Biology, July 2010, Edmonton, Alberta. Nutritional and mineral composition of diademed sifaka foods in undisturbed and disturbed forest at Tsinjoarivo, Madagascar. M.T.

Irwin, J.M. Rothman, J.-L. Raharison, C.A. Chapman. American Association of Physical Anthropology, April 2010, Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Biological and social dimensions of human-primate interaction and disease transmission in Uganda. T.L. Goldberg, C.A. Chapman, S.

Paige, and G. Weny. EcoHealth Conference, London, England, August 2010. Megafaunal losses: when does a forest become empty? O’Farrill, G.X., C.A. Chapman, A. Gonzalez. Association for Tropical Biology

and Conservation, 5th International Symposium-Workshop on Frugivores and Seed Dispersal. Montpellier, France, June 2010.

Reciprocal transplant experiment: are tapirs effective long distance dispersers? O’Farrill, G.X., C.A. Chapman, A. Gonzalez.

Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Germany, July 2009. Assessment of land use effects on water quality in and around Kibale National Park, Uganda and implications for restoration of

degraded streams. Kasangaki, A., L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, D. Twinomugisha, and P. Omeja. Beijing, China. June 2009.

Broad simian retrovirus diversity and co-infection of Ugandan red colobus monkeys (Procolobus rufomitratus tephrosceles) with novel

delta-, lenti- and spuma-retroviruses. W. Switzer, T. Goldberg, D. Sintasath, C.A. Chapman, K. Cameron, W. Karesh, S. Tang, N. Wolfe, I. Rwego, N. Ting. Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, Montreal, February, 2009.

Complex responses to climate and anthropogenic changes: An evaluation based on long-term data from Kibale National Park,

Uganda, Chapman, C.A. L.J. Chapman, J. Hartter, A.L. Jacob, J.S. Lwanga, P. Omeja, J.M. Rothman, and D. Twinomugisha. MacArthur Foundation Conference on Long-term Changes in the Albertine Rift, Kampala, Kampala, Uganda, Jan 6-9th 2008.

Feeding and nutritional ecology of mountain gorillas. Rothman, J. M., Dierenfeld, E. S., Plumptre, A. J., Hintz, H. F., Van Soest, P. J.,

Chapman, C. A., & Pell, A. N. Symposia of the Comparative Nutrition Society, Nova Scotia Sept 2008. Climate change in an African rainforest: implications for primate feeding and nutrition. Rothman, J. M., Chapman, C. A., Chapman, L.

J., Struhsaker, T. T., Twinomugisha, D., & Waterman, P. G. Symposia of the Comparative Nutrition Society, Nova Scotia Sept 2008.

Climate change in Kibale: Interaction of climate, disease, tree phenology, tree chemistry, and primate abundance. C.A. Chapman, D.

Twinomugisha, J. Rothman, T.T. Struhsaker, J. Hartter, P.G. Waterman, & S.A.M. Hodder, International Society of Primatology, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2008.

The Kibale Ecohealth Project: Epidemiology and ecology of infectious disease transmission among primates, people and livestock in a

fragmented forest in western Uganda. T.L. Goldberg, T.R. Gillespie, I.B. Rwego and C.A. Chapman. International Society of Primatology, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2008.

Therapeutic self-medication by free-ranging red colobus monkeys. T.R. Gillespie, C.A. Chapman, and M.A. Huffman. International

Society of Primatology, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2008.

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The use of fruiting synchronicity as a conceptual tool by foraging mangabeys. K.R.L. Janmmat, C.A. Chapman, K. Zueberbuhler, and

R.W. Byrne. International Society of Primatology, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2008. Variation in fecal cortisol levels in a wild black howler monkey population in southern Belize. International Society of Primatology,

Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2008. Effects of selective logging and forest fragmentation on primate-parasite interactions. T.R. Gillespie, E.C. Greiner, and C.A. Chapman.

North American meeting of the American Society of Parasitologists. Merida, Mexico, June 2007. Red colobus abundance in forest fragments: the role of nutrition, parasitism and stress. M.D. Wasserman, C.A. Chapman, T.R.

Gillespie, M.L. Speirs, M.J. Lawes, T.E. Ziegler. International Society of Primatology, Entebbe, Uganda, June 2006. Predicting primate abundance contrasting frugivores and folivores across disturbance regimes. C.A. Chapman. International Society of

Primatology, Entebbe, Uganda, June 2006. Ecological determinants of red colobus monkey biomass and habitat selection: implications for conservation. T.V. Snaith, C.A.

Chapman. International Society of Primatology, Entebbe, Uganda, June 2006. The importance of scale and intraspecific variability in feeding and nutrition. J.E. Lambert, C.A. Chapman. International Society of

Primatology, Entebbe, Uganda, June 2006. Female mate choice in grey-cheeked mangabeys in Kibale National Park, Uganda. M.E. Arlet, F. Molleman, C.A. Chapman.

International Society of Primatology, Entebbe, Uganda, June 2006. Habitat disturbance and the ecology of infectious disease transmission among people, primates and domestic animals in Kibale

National Park, Uganda. T.L. Goldberg, T.R. Gillespie, I.B. Rwego, C.A. Chapman. International Society of Primatology, Entebbe, Uganda, June 2006.

Variance in Ecological conditions and the nature of fission-fusion social organizations. C.A. Chapman. International Society of

Primatology, Turin, Italy, August 2004. Conservation value of forest fragments: Explanations for population declines of colobus in western Uganda. C.A. Chapman, L. Naughton,

M. Lawes, and M. Wasserman. International Society of Primatology, Turin, Italy, August 2004. Dispersal Across Oxygen Gradients: Fitness Trade-offs for an African Cyprinid. L.J. Chapman, S. Schaack, and C.A. Chapman.

International Congress on the Biology of Fish. Manuas, Brazil, August 2004 Forest Fragmentation Alters Primate Parasite Dynamics: Implications for Primate Health and Conservation. T. Gillespie and C.A.

Chapman. Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany. May 2004 30 Years of Research in Kibale National Park, Uganda Reveals a Complex Picture for Conservation. C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, T.T.

Struhsaker, and J.E. Lambert. American Society of Primatology. Calgary, Canada. July 2003. Determinants of forest fragment occupancy and the distribution of the blue monkeys: Lessons for Conservation of guenons. M. Lawes

and C.A. Chapman. American Society of Primatology. Calgary, Canada. July 2003 Variation in Plant Successional Pathways: An African Example of Why Animal Restoration is Difficult. C.A. Chapman and A. Zanne.

Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation, Aberdeen, Scotland. July 2003. Juvenile Tree and Shrub Life-history Character Suites: Associations with Contrasting Habitats. A. Zanne and C.A. Chapman. Association

of Tropical Biology and Conservation, Aberdeen, Scotland. July 2003. Canopy Biology and Tree Climbing Strategies Adjusted for Primate Ecological Studies. A. Houle, C.A. Chapman, and W. Vickery.

International Society of Primatology, Beijing, China. August 2002. Fragmentation and Alteration in Seed Dispersal Processes: Dung Beetles, Seed Fate, and Seedling Diversity. C.A. Chapman, L.J.

Chapman, K. Vulinec, and A. Zanne. Associate of Tropical Biology, Panama, August 2002. Forest Diversity and Niche Specialization: Community versus Individual Species Patterns. A. Zanne and C.A. Chapman. Associate of

Tropical Biology, Panama, August 2002. Coexistence mechanisms among arboreal frugivorous primates in Kibale National Park, Uganda. A. Houle, C.A. Chapman, W. Vickery.

International Society of Behavioral Ecology, Montreal. July 2002. Physiological Refugia, Foraging Challenges, and Conservation of Endangered Taxa in East Africa. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman.

Organization of Tropical Studies (OTS) Board Meeting. San Jose, Costa Rica. April 2002. Considering Terrestrial Systems in the Management of the Nabugabo Ecosystem. R. Ogutu-Ohwayo, C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman,

and L. Kaufman. Ramsar Conference for the Lake Nabugabo Region. Masaka, Uganda. January 2002.

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Biodiversity Lost and Found: A Decade of Research on the Lake Nabugabo Wetland System. R. Ogutu-Ohwayo, L.J. Chapman, C.A.

Chapman, and L. Kaufman. Ramsar Conference for the Lake Nabugabo Region. Masaka, Uganda. January 2002. Foraging Challenges of Red Colobus Monkeys: Influence of Nutrients and Secondary Metabolites. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman.

International Conference of Comparative Physiology and Biochemistry, Botswana. August 2001. Variation in the Diet of Cercopithecus Monkeys: Differences within Forests, Among Forests, and Across Species. C.A. Chapman, L.J.

Chapman, A. Gautier-Hion, J. Lambert, K. Rode, C. Tutin and L.J.T. White, International Primatological Society, Australia. January 2001.

Tropical Deforestation and Aquatic Ecosystems: Our Current State of Knowledge. C.A. Chapman. International Symposium on

Freshwater Fish Conservation, Montechoro, Portugal. November 2000. The Persistence of Nile Tilapia with Nile Perch in the Lake Victoria Basin. G.N. Bwanika, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, Y. Kizito, J.

Balirwa. World Fisheries Symposium, Beijing, China. November 2000. Limitation of Animal Seed Dispersal for Enhancing Forest Succession on Degraded Lands. R.S. Duncan and C.A. Chapman. Sao

Paulo, Brazil. August 2000. Plant-animal Coevolution: Is it thwarted by Spatial and Temporal Variation in Animal Foraging. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman.

Sao Paulo, Brazil. August 2000. Future Directions for Primate Seed Dispersal Studies: Which Way Forward? C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Sao Paulo, Brazil.

August 2000. Deforestation in East Africa: Impacts on Aquatic Ecosystems. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Lake Victoria 2000, Jinja, Uganda.

May 2000. Role of wetlands in the Conservation of Endangered Taxa in the Lake Victoria Basin. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Lake

Victoria 2000, Jinja, Uganda. May 2000 Emerging Water Management Issues in Africa. C.A. Chapman. Aquatic Conservation and Management in Africa, Gainesville,

Florida. March 1999. Fishes of the Forest: Potential and Emerging Threats to a Little-Known Fauna. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Aquatic

Conservation and Management in Africa, Gainesville, Florida. March 1999. Incorporating Wetland Ecotones in the Management and Conservation of Freshwater Ecosystems of Africa. T. Crisman, L.J.

Chapman, and C.A. Chapman. Aquatic Conservation and Management in Africa, Gainesville. March 1999. Implications of Small Scale Variation in Ecological Conditions for the Diet and Density of Red Colobus Monkeys. C.A. Chapman and

L.J. Chapman. Recent Trends in Primate Socioecology, Inuyama, Japan. January 1998. Spatial and Temporal Variance in Chimpanzee Food Resources: Implications for Grouping. C.A. Chapman and R.W. Wrangham.

International Primatological Society, Madison, Wisconsin. August 1996. Determinants of Group Size in Primates: The Importance of Group Movement. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. International

Primatological Society, Madison, Wisconsin. August 1996. Primate Community Biomass: Spatial and Temporal Variance. C.A. Chapman and D.A. Onderdonk. International Primatological

Society, Madison, Wisconsin. August 1996. Predicting Spatial and Temporal Variation in Primate Community Biomass. C.A. Chapman and D. A. Onderdonk. Wenner-Gren

Symposium, Madison, Wisconsin. August 1996. Social Ecology of Kanyawara Chimpanzees: Implications for the THV Hypothesis. R.W. Wrangham, C.A. Chapman, A.P. Clark-

Arcadi, and G. Basuta. Wenner-Gren Symposium, Mexico. June 1995. Developing Standard Methods for Assessing the Availability of Fruit and Herbaceous Food in African Ape's Habitat. C.A. Chapman

and R. Malenky. International Primatology Society, Strasbourg, France. August 1992. The Role of Papyrus Swamps as Barriers to Fish Dispersal: A Case Study and Implications for Fish Diversity in the Lake Victoria

Basin. L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, L.S. Kaufman, and K. Liem. Biodiversity, Fisheries, and the Future of Lake Victoria. Jinja, Uganda. August 1992.

International Contributed Oral Presentations Some plant species in Moraceae and Fabaceae are estrogenic: Implicataion for primate field endrocrinology. M.D. Waserman, J.M.

Rothman, M. Despres-Einspenner, and C.A. Chapman. International Society of Primatology, Hanoi, Vietnam. August, 2014

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A rad approach to the population and conservation genomics of the Ugandan red colobus monkey. Ruiz-Lopez, M.J., T.L. Goldberg,

C.A. Chapman, J.H. Jones, W.M. Switzer, S.D.W. Frost, M.A. Gibson, P.D. Etter, E.A. Johnson, N. Ting. International Society of Primatology, Hanoi, Vietnam. August, 2014.

Patch departure decisions in black and white colobus monkeys. C.A. Johnson, D. Raubenheimer, C.A. Chapman, K.J. Tombak, A.J.

Reid, J.M. Rothman. International Society of Primatology, Hanoi, Vietnam. August, 2014 Transmission dynamics of parasites co-infecting wild primate hosts in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Ghai, R.R., J.T. Davies, C.A.

Chapman, and T.L. Goldberg. American Society of Primatologists, San Juan, Puerto Rico, June 2013 Implications on non-equilibrium dynamics for primate conservation. C.A. Chapman. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological

Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012. Folivorous ursine colobus monkeys (Colobus vellerosus) do the Levy walk. J.A. Teichroeb, C.A. Chapman, P. Sicotte. XXIV Congress

of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012. Seasonality in the consumption of estrogenic plant foods: implications for red colobus monkey (Procolobus rufomitratus) hormonal

status. M.D. Wasserman, C.A. Chapman, K. Milton, D.J. Wittwer, T. E. Ziegler. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012.

Movement patterns in primates, a comparison between folivores and frugivores. R. Reyna-Hurtado, U. Hernandez-Sarabia, J. Serio-

Silva, C.A. Chapman. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012. Climate change in an African rainforest: Implications for primate feeding and nutrition. J.M. Rothman, C.A. Chapman, T.T. Struhsaker,

D. Raubenheimer, D. Twinomugisha, P.G. Waterman. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012.

Parasite transmission in a complex community of primates. R.R. Ghai, M.I. Thurber, C.A. Chapman, T.L. Goldberg. XXIV Congress of

the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012. Seasonality in the consumption of estrogenic plant foods: Implications for red colobus monkey (Procolobus rufomitratus) hormonal

status. M.D. Wasserman, C.A. Chapman, K. Milton, D.J. Wittwer, T.E. Ziegler. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012.

Non-equilibrium dynamics in primate populations leads to inconsistent selective pressures. C.A. Chapman. Evolution, Ottawa,

Ontario. July 2012. Seasonal mortality patterns in non-human primates: Implications for variation in selection pressures across environments. Gogarten,

J.F., L.M. Brown, C.A. Chapman, M. Cords, D. Doran-Sheehy, L.M. Fedigan, F.E. Grine, S. Perry, A.E. Pusey, E.H.M. Sterck, S.A. Wich, and P.C. Wright. Evolution, Ottawa, Ontario. July 2012.

Phytoestrogens in the primate diet: Insight from the red colobus monkey and mountain gorilla. M.D. Wasserman, J.M. Rothman, A.

Taylor-Gutt, C.A. Chapman, K. Milton, D.C. Leitman. American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 2012.

Invertebrates provide substantial energy and protein for redtail monkeys (Cercopithecus ascanius) in Uganda. M.A. Bryer, D.

Raubenheimer, C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Rothman (2012) Annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology, Portland, Oregon, April 2012.

Dietary, behavioral, and hormonal comparisons of female red colobus monkeys (Procolobus rufomitratus) in logged and unlogged

areas of Kibale National Park, Uganda. K. Milich, R. Stumpf, C.A. Chapman, J. Bahr. American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 2012.

Phytoestrogens in the primate diet: Insight from the red colobus monkey and mountain gorilla. M.D. Wasserman, J.M. Rothman, A.

Taylor-Gutt, C.A. Chapman, K. Milton, D.C. Leitman. American Association of Physical Anthropologists. Minneapolis, Minnesota. April 2011

Dynamics in protected areas and domesticated landscapes caused by climate change and anthropogenic use. J. Hartter, S. Ryan, M.

Stampone, C.A. Chapman. American Geophysical Union, San Francisco, December 2009. The importance of protein and fiber in the diet of black howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra) living in a hurricane damaged forest in Belize.

A.M Behie, M.S.M. Pavelka and C.A Chapman American Society of Primatologists. American Society of Primatology, San Diego, Sept 2009.

The role of food supply in the recovery of a black howler monkey (Alouatta pigra) population in response to a major hurricane. Behie,

A.M., M.S.M. Pavelka, C.A. Chapman. American Society of Physical Anthropology. Chicago, April 2009. Intraspecific variability in the nutritional content of primate foods: Implications for primate feeding ecology and ways forward. J.M.

Rothman and C.A. Chapman. American Society of Physical Anthropology. Chicago, April 2009.

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Simulating Parasite-Host Interactions using Agent-Based Models: A Case-Study of Kibale National Park, Uganda. R. Sengupta, T.

Bonnell, and C. A. Chapman. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting in Las Vegas, March 2009. The role of food supply in the recovery of a black howler monkey (Alouatta pigra) population in response to a major hurricane. A.M.

Behie, M.S.M. Pavelka and C.A. Chapman. American Association of Physical Anthropology November 2008 How can conservation biology best prepare for declining population growth rates and global urbanization? A. Jacobs, R. Sengupta, I.

Vaccaro, and C.A. Chapman. Resilience Adaptation and Transformation in Turbulent Times Conference. Stockholm, Sweden – April 2008.

Implications of spatial and temporal heterogeneity of food resources for variation in chimpanzee community size in Kibale National

Park, Uganda. Potts, K.B., C.A. Chapman, and J.S. Lwanga. American Association of Physical Anthropology, Philadelphia March 2007.

Environmental services and hazards of wetlands and forest patches in Western Uganda. Joel Hartter, Abe Goldman, Michael Binford,

Colin Chapman, Lauren Chapman, Jane Southworth. American Association of American Geographers, Chicago – March, 2006

Do nutrition, parasitism, and stress have synergistic affects on red colobus populations living in forest fragments? C.A Chapman, M.

Wasserman, T. Gillespie, M. Speirs, M. Lawes, & T. Ziegler. Ecological Society of America/INTECOL, Montreal, Canada, August 2005.

Behavioural responses of red colobus to parasitic infection and infection risk. T.R. Gillespie and C.A. Chapman. International Society

of Primatology, Turin, Italy, August 2004. Forest fragmentation alters parasite dynamics: Implications for primate health and conservation. T.R. Gillespie and C.A. Chapman.

International Society of Primatology, Turin, Italy, August 2004. Plant DNA sequences from feces: Potential means for new insights into wild animal diets. Bradley et al. Max Plankt Institute,

Germany, August 2004. Forest fragmentation alters parasite dynamics in African primate populations. T.R. Gillespie and C.A. Chapman. Conservation

Biology, New York, August 2004. Mating tactics of resident and migrating males of arboreal monkeys, grey-cheeked mangabeys. M. Arlet, E.H.M. Sterck, C.A.

Chapman, F. Molleman, W. Olupot. Benelux Zoological Conference, Leiden, October 2003. Long-term Effects of Logging on Parasite Dynamics in African Primate Populations. T. Gillespie and C.A. Chapman, Wildlife Disease

Association, Saskatoon, Canada, August 2003. Impact of Logging-induced Ecological Change on Disease Dynamics in African Forest Primates. C.A. Chapman. American Society of

Primatologists, Calgary, Canada, July 2003. Habitat Patchiness, Hypoxia, and Fish Assemblages in an East African Wetland. L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and T.L. Crisman.

Environmental Monitoring of Tropical and Subtropical Wetlands, Okavango Delta, Maun, Botswana, December, 2002. Coexistence Mechanisms amongst Frugivorous Anthropoid Primates. A. Houle, C.A. Chapman, and W. Vickery. International Society of

Primatology, Beijing, China. August 2002. Terrestrial behavior of spider monkeys (Ateles spp.): A comparative study. C.J. Campbell, F. Aureli, C.A. Chapman, G. Ramos-

Fernandex, K. Matthews, S. Russo, and S. Suraez. Physical Anthropology meetings, Tempe Arizona. April 2002. Expediting Forest Regeneration in Tropical Grasslands: Distance and Isolation from Seed Sources in Plantations A.E. Zanne and

C.A. Chapman. Ecological Society of America. August 2001. Bridging the Seed Dispersal Gap: Does Seed Dispersal Affect Tree Seedling Density in a Primate-Plant Interaction? S.R. Balcomb

and C.A. Chapman. Sao Paulo, Brazil. August 2000. Abundance and Composition and Animal-dispersed Tree Species in the Advanced Regeneration below Sites of Concentrated Seed

Deposition. J. Paul and C.A. Chapman. Sao Paulo, Brazil. August 2000. Bridging the Seed Dispersal Gap: Does Seed Dispersal by Frugivores Affect Seedling Distribution in a Primate-tree Interaction? S.R.

Balcomb and C.A. Chapman. Ecological Society of America, Spokane, WA. August, 1999. Hornbill seed dispersal at nest sties: Effects on floral composition beyond the seedling stage. Ecological Society of America 84th

Annual Meeting, Spokane, WA. August 1999 Long-term effects of logging on African primate communities. T. Gillespie, S. Balcomb, C. Chapman, J. Skorupa, and T. Struhsaker.

Society for Conservation Biology Annual Meeting, University of Maryland. June 1999.

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Papyrus Swamps and Faunal Diversification: Geographical Variation among Populations of the African Cyprinid, Barbus neumayeri.

L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, D. Brazeau, B. McGlaughlin, and M. Jordan. Tropical Fish Biology, Annual Int. Symposium. University of Southampton, England. July 1998.

Cultural Eutrophication of a Ugandan Highland Crater Lake: A Twenty-five Year Comparison of Limnological Parameters. T.L.

Crisman, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, and J. Prenger. XXVII International Congress of Theoretical and Applied Limnology, SIL - 98. Dublin, Ireland. July 1998.

Predictors of Seasonal Oxygen Levels in a Ugandan Swamp/River System: A 3-year Profile. L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, T.L.

Crisman, and J. Prenger. XXVII International Congress of Theoretical and Applied Limnology, SIL - 98. Dublin, Ireland. July 1998.

Invertebrate Community Structure and Oxygen Availability in an Intermittent Stream/Wetland System of the Ugandan Uplands. T.

Osborne, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, T.L. Crisman, J. Prenger, S. Nyguen, and E. Stecker. XXVII International Congress of Theoretical and Applied Limnology, SIL - 98. Dublin, Ireland. July 1998.

The Effects of Forest Fragmentation on Primate Communities in Kibale National Park, Uganda. D.A. Onderdonk and C.A. Chapman.

International Primatological Society, Madison, Wisconsin. August 1996. The Role of Wetlands in the Maintenance of Fish Faunal Structure and Diversity in the Lake Victoria Basin. L.J. Chapman, C.A.

Chapman, and T.L. Crisman. XXVI Int. Congress of Theoretical and Applied Limnology, San Paulo, Brazil. July 1995. International Invited Discussant Sub-Saharan Africa Program of AAAS - Symposium on Emerging Water Management Issues in Africa. Philadelphia. February 1998. International Symposium Organizer Nutritional Ecology of Primates in Uganda: J.M. Rothman and C.A. Chapman. International Society of Primatology, Entebbe,

Uganda, June 2004. International Poster Presentations Use of nextRAD and RNA-seq for the development of conservation genomic resources for the endangered red colobus monkey. N.

Ting, B. Switzer, M. Lopex, T.L. Goldberg, J Jones, S. Frost, C.A. Chapman, M. Lauck, P. Etter, E. Johnson, M. Gibson, D. OConnor, T. Friedrich and S. Sibley. European Society of Evolutionary Biology, Lisbon, Portugal, August 2013.

Defining the “lean season” and the “lean habitat” effects on seasonal and habitat variation on nutrient intakes in wild lemurs. M.T.

Irwin, J.M. Rothman, J. Raharison, D. Raubenheimer, and C.A. Chapman. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012.

Nutritional implications of insectivory in redtail monkeys (Cercopithecus ascanius). M. Bryer, D. Raubenheimer, C.A. Chapman, J.M.

Rothman. XXIV Congress of the International Primatological Society. Cancun, Mexico. August 2012. Do spider monkesy (Ateles geoffroyi) in areas duturbed by people have a greater parasite infection than in non-disturbed areas?

Castro, K.C. and C.A. Chapman. SQBEC, Sherbrooke Quebec. Noveber 2011. Hydrolyzable tannins in red colobus and mountain gorilla diets. S. Ravi, K. Lund, C. Johnson, C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Rothman.

American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 2011. How do differences in dietary composition affect diet nutrient concentrations? A test with colobus monkeys in Kibale National Park,

Uganda. A. Ryan, C.A. Chapman, J.M. Rothman. American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 2011.

Diet and polyspecific associations affect nearest-neighbour distances of red tail monkeys in Kibale National Park, Uganda. M.A.

Bryer, C.A. Chapman, and J.M. Rothman. American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 2011.

Gastrointestinal microbial community structure in humans, livestock, and non-human primates from Western Uganda. A. McCord, T.

Goldberg, K. Klotz; A. Koblings, C.A. Chapman, G. Weny. Ecology of Emerging Disease, London, England, August 2010. Self-medication by red colobus monkeys (Procolobus rufomitratus) with African Cherry (Prunus africana) in Kibale National Park,

Uganda. Nora H. Prior, Colin A. Chapman, and Tom R. Gillespie. Associate of Environmental Studies and Sciences, Portland, Oregon, June 2010.

Dynamics in protected areas and domesticated landscapes caused by climate change and anthropogenic use. J. Hartter, M.

Stampone, S.J. Ryan and C.A. Chapman. American Society of Geography. San Francisco. December 2009. Land use effects on stream water quality in and around Kibale National Park, Uganda. A. Kasangaki, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman,

P. Omeja, D. Twinomugisha. Diversitas, South Africa, October 2009.

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Birds of a feather: examining interaction of red colobus through molecular and observational data. J.D. Allen, C.A. Chapman, M.T. Clark, J. Ungvari-Martin, and D. Twinomugisha. Mammalogical Conference, Argentina, August 2009.

The physiological and behavioural consequences of darting and collaring on the Ugandan red colobus monkey. W.D. Wasserman,

C.A. Chapman, T.E. Ziegler, International Society of Primatology, Edinburgh Scotland, August 2008. Forest fragmentation and cortisol levels in red colobus monkeys. M.D. Wasserman and C.A. Chapman. Conservation Biology

Society, Brasilia, Brasil, July 2005. Consequences of Parks for Land Use, Livelihood Diversification and Biodiversity in East Africa. Goldman et al. National Science

Foundation, Workshop for Enhancing Collaborative Research on the Environment in Sub-Saharan Africa. Arlington, February 2005.

Plant DNA sequences from feces: Potential means for new insights into wild animal diets. Bradley et al. Max Plankt Institute,

Germany, August 2004. Effects of selective logging on parasite infection prevalence and infection risk in African forest primates. T. Gillespie and C.A.

Chapman. International Symposium on Diseases of Zoo and Wild Animals, Rome, Italy, May 2003. Host, macrohabitat, and microhabitat specificity in the African gill parasite Neodiplozoon polycotyleus [Monogenea] in the host genus

Barbus [Cyprinidae]. K.M.N. Raymond, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Lanciani, and C.A. Chapman. Joint Meeting of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists. Manaus, Brazil, June 2003.

Terrestrial behavior of spider monkeys (Ateles spp.): A comparative study. Campbell, C.J., F. Aureli, C.A. Chapman, G. Ramos-

Fernandez, K. Matthews, S.E. Russo, S. Suarez, and L. Vick. Physical Anthropology meetings. April 2003. Application of Protein to Fiber Ratios to Predict Colobine Abundance on Small Spatial Scales. C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, K.A.

Bjorndal, and D.A. Onderdonk. Joint meeting of the British Ecological Society and Ecological Society of America. Orlando, Florida. April 2000.

Determinants of Group Size in the Red Colobus Monkey (Procolobus badius). T. Gillespie and C.A. Chapman. Joint meeting of the

British Ecological Society and Ecological Society of America, Orlando, Florida. April 2000. Sexual Coercion as a Selective Force Influencing Primate Social Organization: A Theoretical Framework. L. Sirot and C.A. Chapman.

International Primatological Society, Madison, Wisconsin. August 1996. Regeneration Patterns of Uvariopsis congensis. A. Kaplan and C.A. Chapman. Ecological Society of America, Providence, Rhode

Island. August 1996. National Contributed Oral Presentations Measuring spatial-temporal home range use in animal-movement data using the Beta-Binomial distribution. T.R. Bonnell, P. Dutilleul,

C.A. .Chapman, R. Reyna-Hurtado, and R. Sengupta. Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Science Symposium Montreal, Quebec, December 2011

How many monkeys does this forest feed? Longterm patterns in forests recovering from different land uses, Kibale National Park,

Uganda. A.L. Jacob, C.A. Chapman, M.R. Lesosky, and P. Parker. Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Science Symposium Montreal, Quebec, December 2011

Changes in primate groups size; Affects on Activity. J.Gogarten, C.A. Chapman, and D. Twinomugisha Société québécoise pour

l’étude biologique du comportement (Quebec Society for the Biological Study of Behaviour). Sherbrooke, QC, Canada. November 2011

Combien de singes cette forêt supporte-t-elle? Tendances à long terme dans les forêts remettre de différentes utilisations des terres.

A.L. Jacob, C.A. Chapman, M.R. Lesosky, and P. Parker. Société québécoise pour l’étude biologique du comportement (Quebec Society for the Biological Study of Behaviour). Sherbrooke, QC, Canada. November 2011.

The role of primates in determining tropical forest composition: Specific tests with seed dispersal, Kibale National Park, Uganda. S.R.

Balcomb and C.A. Chapman. American Society of Primatologists, New Orleans, Louisiana. August, 1999. Long-term effects of logging on African primate communities; a 28-year comparison from Kibale National Park, Uganda. T. Gillespie,

S. Balcomb, C. Chapman, J. Skorupa, and T. Struhsaker. American Society of Primatologists. New Orleans. August 1999. Redescription and Ecology of Amphilius jacksonii (Siluriformes: Amphiliidae) in Western Uganda. S.J. Walsh, L.J. Chapman, A.E.

Rosenberger, and C.A. Chapman. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, Philadelphia. June 1999. The Hardness of Cercopithecine Foods: Implications for the Critical Function of Enamel Thickness in Exploiting Fallback Foods. J.E.

Lambert, C.A. Chapman, R.W. Wrangham, and N.L. Conklin-Brittain. American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Columbus Ohio, May 1999.

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Variation in the Distribution of Oxygen and Introduced Tilapia in a Ugandan Crater Lake: Fisheries Implications. C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, and T.L. Crisman. American Fisheries Society, Deerborn, Michigan. August 1996.

Wetlands as Refugia from Introduced Nile Perch in the Lake Victoria Basin of East Africa. L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, L.S.

Kaufman, and M. Chandler. American Fisheries Society, Deerborn MI. August 1996. Papyrus Swamps, Hypoxia and Small-scale Geographical Variation among Populations of the African Cyprinid, Barbus neumayeri .

L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Ecological Society of America, Providence, Rhode Island. August 1996. Wetlands as Refugia from Predation. M. Chandler, L.J. Chapman, C.A. Chapman, L. Kaufman, R. Ogutu-Ohwayo, and A. von

Bismarck. Ecological Society of America, Snowbird, Utah. July 1995. Twenty Years of Primate Population Densities. P. Waser, W. Olupot, C.A. Chapman, and C. Brown. Ecological Society of America,

Chicago, Illinois. July 1992. Regional Invited Oral Presentations Services and hazards of wetlands and forest patches for communities around Kibale National Park, Uganda. J. Hartter, A. Goldman,

M. Binford, C.A. Chapman, L.J. Chapman, and J. Southworth. Florida Society of Geographers. February 2006. Landscape Processes and the Macroevolutionary Patterns of East African Cichlid Fishes. L.S. Kaufman, M. Chandler, L.J. Chapman,

and C.A. Chapman. Geological Society of America, Northeast Regional Symposium on Tectonics & Biodiversity. August 1995.

Local Contributed Oral Presentations Long-term changes in primates and tree communities: how important are climate change and non-equilibrium forest dynamics? Gearge Washington University, Biology Departmetn, November 2013 Changes in primate groups size; Affects on Activity. J.Gogarten, C.A. Chapman, and D. Twinomugisha Quebec Society for the

Biological Study of Behaviour. Sherbrooke, QC, Canada. November 2011 Measuring spatial-temporal home range use in animal-movement data using the Beta-Binomial distribution. T.R. Bonnell, P. Dutilleul,

C.A. .Chapman, R. Reyna-Hurtado, and R. Sengupta. Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Science Symposium Montreal, Quebec, November 2011

How many monkeys does this forest feed? Longterm patterns in forests recovering from different land uses, Kibale National Park,

Uganda. A.L. Jacob, C.A. Chapman, M.R. Lesosky, and P. Parker. Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Science Symposium Montreal, Quebec, November 2011

Food resource use in folivorous primates: a search for what makes a species deplete food patches. Tombak, K., A. Reid, C.A.

Chapman. Societe quebecoise pour l’etude biologique du comportement. Montreal, November 2010. Bonnell, T., C.A. Chapman, R. Sengupta. Red colobus foraging behaviour and is implications for the spread of disease in logged

forest. Societe quebecoise pour l’etude biologique du comportement. Montreal, November 2010. Jacob, A.L. and C.A. Chapman. How many elephants crossed the road? Long-term changes in elephant abundance and habitat use in

Kibale National Park, Uganda. Societe quebecoise pour l’etude biologique du comportement. Montreal, November 2010. Hornbill seed dispersal to nest sites: Effects on floral composition beyond the seedling stage. Paul, J.R. and C.A. Chapman. Florida

Ecology and Evolution Symposium. May, 1999. Conservation of Forest Primates: The Effects of Logging and Forest Fragmentation on the Primates of Kibale National Park, Uganda.

C.A. Chapman. New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology. Columbia University, New York. February 1999. Survival without Dispersal: The Fate of Non-Dispersed Seeds? C.A. Chapman. Florida Ecological and Evolutionary Symposium.

Archibold Biological Station, Lake Placid. April 1994. Local Invited Oral Presentations Strategies for survival: association patterns of red colobus monkeys, R. Petersen, K. Miltch, and C.A. Chapman. Midwest Primate

Interest Group. September 2013. The synergy between nutrition, stress, and disease as determinants of animal abundance. C.A. Chapman and R. Reyna-Hurtado.

ECOSUR, Campeche, Mexico, May 2013 Lecture series on Primate Ecology, Behaviour, and Conservation. C.A. Chapman and J.C. Silva Serio, Instituto de Ecologia, Xalapa,

Mexico, May 2013 Non-equilibrium dynamics in primate populations: their implications for Conservation and the study of primate evolution. C.A.

Chapman. Department d’anthropologie, Universite de Montreal, April 2012.

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Perspective on primate conservation. Academic Students Week, McGill University, August 26, 2012 Patterns in tropical forest regenerating after logging, burning, and farming. Jacob, AL, P Parker, MR Lesosky, and CA Chapman.,

International Society of Tropical Foresters-Yale. New Haven, USA. January 2012. What drives change: A 40- and 20-year record of change in a primate community and their forest. C.A. Chapman, Biology Department,

University of Missouri, St Louis. April 2011. Combien de singes cette forêt supporte-t-elle? Patrons de restauration des forêts tropicales. Jacob, A.L., P. Parker, M.R. Lesosky,

and C.A. Chapman. Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Science Annual Symposium. Montreal, Canada. Dec 2011. Tendances à long terme dans les forêts remettre de différentes utilisations des terres. Jacob, A.L., C.A. Chapman, M.R. Lesosky, and

P. Parker. Société québécoise pour l’étude biologique du comportement (Quebec Society for the Biological Study of Behaviour). Sherbrooke, Canada. November 2011.

Primate conservation and the role of infectious disease. C.A. Chapman, University of Veracruz, Veracruz, Mexico August 2010. Primate conservation and the role of infectious disease. New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology, New York, March 2010 Primate conservation the role of academics. C.A. Chapman. Hunter College, New York, March 2010. A long-term conservation program in Uganda: Research & training from the forest to the fishes. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman,

Wildlife Conservation Society, New York, March 2010. Like herding fish: overfishing, free riders and collective action in the East African Lakes. I. Vaccaro, L.J. Chapman, and C.A.

Chapman. McGill School of Environment, McGill University, Montreal, QC. September 2009. Predictors of Primate Abundance: Nutrition, Stress, Disease, and Forest Change, C.A. Chapman, Department of Biology, Concordia

University, Montreal, QC. September 2009 Academic Research on Primates: Conservation Implications. C.A. Chapman. National Geographic Society, Washington DC, May

2008. Primates in Peril: What can be Done? MiniScience, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, May 2008. Predictors of Primate Abundance: Synergy among Nutrition, Stress, and Disease. C.A. Chapman. NYCEP, New York University,

New York, October 2007. Predictors of Primate Abundance: Synergy among Nutrition, Stress, and Disease. C.A. Chapman. Department of Anthropology,

University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, November 2005. Predictors of Primate Abundance: Synergy among Nutrition, Stress, and Disease. C.A. Chapman. Biology Department, Laval

University, Montreal, Quebec, October 2005. Predictors of Primate Abundance: Synergy among Nutrition, Stress, and Disease. C.A. Chapman. Biology Department, UQAM,

Montreal, Quebec, October 2005. How can anthropogenic change affect host-parasite interactions. C.A. Chapman. McGill Symposium on Environmental Research,

McGill University, Montreal, Canada, May 2005 Animal Restoration. C.A. Chapman. University of California – Berkeley, William Main Distinguished Lecture Series, San Francisco,

California, March 2005 Predicting Primate Abundance. C.A. Chapman. Anthropology - Harvard University, Boston, March 2005 Predictors of Primate Abundance: Nutrition, Stress, and/or Disease. C.A. Chapman. Biology Department, McGill University, March

2005. Nutrition and Disease as Factors Determining Animal Abundance. C.A. Chapman. Sherbrooke University, March 2005. Predicting Primate Abundance: Nutrition, Disease, and/or Stress. C.A. Chapman. Natural Resources Studies, McGill University,

Montreal, Canada, March 2004. What Determines Primate Group Size? C.A. Chapman. Anthropology Department, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, March 2004. Do Nutrition, Parasitism, and Stress Operate Synergistically to Influence Colobus Population Dynamics? C.A. Chapman. Department

of Geography, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, November 2003.

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A 10-year Evaluation of Life-history Strategies of Forest and Gap Tree Species in an African Forest: Implications for Conservation. C.A. Chapman. Botany Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida. January 2004

Variation in Plant Successional Pathways After Logging and Disturbance: An African Example of Why Animal Restoration is Difficult.

C.A. Chapman. School for Forest Resources and Conservation. University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida. January 2004. Tropical Deforestation and its impacts on Aquatic Ecosystems. C.A. Chapman. Center for Wetlands, University of Florida,

Gainesville. September 2003. Augmenting Conservation Through Interdisciplinary Outreach and Networking (Action). C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Office of

Global Health, University of Florida Medical School. August 2003 Predicting Primate Abundances: An Integration of Approaches. C.A. Chapman. Institute of Zoology, London, April 2003. Predicting Primate Abundances: An Integration of Approaches. C.A. Chapman. Department of Anthropology, Boston University,

March 2003. Primates in Peril: What is Happening and What Can Be Done? C.A. Chapman. Calgary Zoo and University of Calgary. October

2002. Biodiversity Lost and Found: Forest Restoration and Fish Faunal Refugia in Uganda. C.A. Chapman. EthnoEcology Society,

University of Florida. February, 2001. Primate Conservation: Directions for the Future. C.A. Chapman. University of Central Florida, Orlando. February 2001. Primate Conservation: Habitat Fragmentation, Logging, and the Consequences of Reduced Seed Dispersal. C.A. Chapman. Florida

International University. February 2000. Ecological Constraints on Primate Groups. C.A. Chapman. Hunter College. February 1999. Conservation in Uganda: Primates of Kibale and Fishes of the Lake Victoria Region. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Wildlife

Conservation Society, New York, New York. February 1999. Terrestrial and Aquatic Conservation in Uganda: Forest Restoration and Faunal Refugia. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman.

University of Georgia, Athens. January 1999. Conservation and Restoration of African Rainforests. C.A. Chapman. K.K. Knapp Invited Speaker, University of Wisconsin, Madison.

April 1998. Ecological Determinants of Primate Group Size and Social Reasons to Deviate. C.A. Chapman. Department of Psychology,

University of Wisconsin, Madison. April 1998. What Determines the Size of Primate Groups. C.A. Chapman. Department of Anthropology, Boston University, Boston,

Massachusetts. November 1997. Ecological Determinants of Primate Group Size. C.A. Chapman. Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.

September 1997. Ecological Constraints on Primate Group Size. C.A. Chapman. Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. March 1997. Research into Management Options for The Conservation of Tropical Forests: Kibale National Park, Uganda. C.A. Chapman.

Conservation & Development Forum Seminars, Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL. March 1997. Conservation in Uganda: Forest Restoration and Faunal Refugia. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Wildlife Conservation Society,

New York, New York.. February 1997. Group Living in Primates: What Determines Group Size? C.A. Chapman. Florida Chapter of Sigma Xi, Gainesville, Florida. October

1996. Terrestrial Research in Kibale National Park: The Significance to the Park's Service. C.A. Chapman. Kibale National Park, Uganda.

July 1996. Conservation in Uganda: Forest Restoration and Faunal Refugia. C.A. Chapman and L.J. Chapman. Center for African Studies,

University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida. February 1995 Frugivory and the Fate of Dispersed Seeds in Kibale Forest, Uganda. C.A. Chapman. Department of Zoology. University of Florida,

Gainesville, Florida. February 1993. Aquatic Conservation in the Lake Victoria Basin: Problems and Prospects. L.J. Chapman and C.A. Chapman. Tropical Conservation

and Development. Univ. of Florida. February 1993.

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Ecological Constraints on Group Size: From Primates to Dolphins. C.A. Chapman. New England Aquarium, Boston, Massachusetts.

March 1993. Forest Primate Conservation: Concepts and Problems. C.A. Chapman. Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. February 1993. Frugivory and the Fate of Dispersed Seeds in Kibale Forest, Uganda. C.A. Chapman. Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.

February 1993. Forest Primate Conservation: Concepts and Problems. C.A. Chapman. Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Indiana. February 1993. Reviewer For: Journals and Book Chapters (Total = 728) Acta Ethologica (1 paper) Acta Theriologica (9 papers) African Journal of Ecology (10 papers) African Primates (4 papers) African Zoology (2 papers) American Journal of Physical Anthropology (7 papers) American Journal of Primatology (109 papers) American Midland Naturalist (2 papers) American Naturalist (2 papers) Animal Behaviour (6 papers) Animal Biology (2 papers) Animal Cognition (1 paper) Animal Conservation (9 papers) Annals of Tropical Medicine (2 papers) Auk (1 paper) Behavioral Ecology (10 papers) Behaviour (5 papers) Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology (27 papers) Biological Conservation (8 papers) Biological Invations (1 paper) Biodiversity and Conservation (2 papers) Biotropica (42 papers) BMC Ecology (2 papers) Brenesia (3 papers) California Academy of Sciences (1 paper) Canadian Journal of Forestry (1 paper) Cambridge University Press (4 proposals) Climate Change (1 paper) Conservation Biology (15 papers) Conservation Letters (1 paper) Conservation and Society (1 paper) Diversity and Distribution (2 papers) Earthscan (1 proposal) Ecology (7 papers) Ecotropica (1 paper) Emerging Infectious Diseases (1 paper) Ethology (2 papers) Environmental Conservation (1 paper) Evolutionary Anthropology (6 papers) Forest Ecology and Management (3 papers) Folia Geobotanica (1 paper) Folia Primatologica (2 papers) Florida Entomological Society (1 paper) Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (1 paper) Functional Ecology (1 paper) Global Ecology and Biogeography (1 paper) Hormones and Behavior (1 paper) International Journal of Primatology (99 papers) International Journal of Tropical Ecology and Conservation (1 paper) Journal of Animal Ecology (4 papers) Journal of Applied Ecology (4 papers) Journal of East African Natural History (2 papers) Journal of Ecology (2 papers) Journal of Ecology and Natural Environments (1 paper) Journal of Geographic and Regional Planning (1 paper) Journal of Human Evolution (1 paper) Journal of Mammalogy (1 paper)

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Journal of Sustainable Forestry (1 paper) Journal of Tropical Ecology (15 papers) Journal of Tropical Forest Science (2 papers) Journal of Zoology (London) (3 papers) Kluwer Academic Press (1 proposal) Mammalia (1 paper) Nature (1 paper) Naturwissenschaften (1 paper) Oecologia (3 papers) Open Journal of Ecology (1 paper) Oryx (1 paper) Ostrich (4 papers) Outer Rim Press (1 book) Oxford University Press (1 proposal) Parasitology (2 papers) Plenum Publisher (1 proposal) PLosOne (6 papers) Primates (60 papers) Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (3 paper) Proceedings of the Royal Society of London (2 paper) Science (1 paper) Science Reports - Nature (2 paper) South African Journal of Wildlife Research (1 paper) Springer (2 book prospectus) Taprobanica - Journal of Asia Biodiversity (15 paper) Tropical Conservation (1 paper) Trends in Ecology and Evolution (TREE) (1 paper) Trends in Parasitology (1 paper) University of Chicago Press (1 proposal) University Press of Florida (1 book, 2 proposal) Wildlife Society Bulletin (2 paper) Yearbook of Physical Anthropology (1 paper) Zoo Biology (1 paper) Zoological Studies (1 paper) IUCN Action Plans (1 - Mesoamerica) Book Chapter (146 contributions) Grants (Total = 958) Alberta Ingenuity Grant (2 proposal) American Philosophical Society (2 proposals) BP Conservation Grants (3 proposals) CAS Ford Foundation (22 proposals) Center for Field Research – Earthwatch (10 proposals) Centre of New York Research Foundation (1 proposal) Challenge Fund, New York University (3 proposals) Chicago Zoological Society (2 proposals) City University of New York (1 proposal) Conservation International (1 proposal) Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (1 proposal) Fulbright (13 proposals) German Research Foundation (5 proposal) Graduate Women in Science (1 Proposal) Guggenheim Foundation (2 proposals) International Foundation for Science (5 proposal) Lincoln Park Zoo (1 proposal) Leakey Foundation (44 proposals) MacArthur Foundation (1 proposal) Makerere University Biological Field Station (1 proposal) National Geographic Society (428 proposals) Expedition Council (17 proposals) Buffett Award (120 nominations) National Research Foundation, South Africa (3 individuals) National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (9 proposal) National Science Foundation (67 proposals total) Animal Behavior (2 proposals) Behavioral Systems Cluster (2 proposal) Biological Anthropology (8 proposal) Division of Biological Infrastructure (1 proposal) Ecological Studies (7 proposals) Environmental and Global Change (1 proposal)

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Long-term Projects in Environmental Biology (2 proposals) Physical Anthropology (41 proposals) Population and Evolutionary Processes (2 proposal) Systematics and Population Biology (1 proposal) Programa de Conservación de Especies en Riesgo (PROCER) Primate Conservation, Inc. (104 proposals) Organization for Tropical Studies (OTS) (4 proposals) Rufford Small Grants Program (1 proposal) Sigma Delta Epsilon-Graduate Women in Science (1 proposal) Swiss National Science Foundation (1 proposal) University of Natal, Vice-Chancellor's Research Award (1 proposal) Waitt Institute for Discovery (6 proposal) Wildlife Conservation Society (21 proposals) Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research (9 proposal) Whitehead Foundation (1 proposal) Tenure and Promotion Packages (44 individuals) External Examiner for international thesis and dissertations (14 individuals) Teaching Experience: Primate Behaviour and Ecology (ANTH 311), Department of Anthropology, McGill University. Primate Studies and Conservation (ANTH 411), Department of Anthropology, McGill University. Environmental Research Design (ENVR 301), McGill School of Environment, McGill University. Environmental Research (ENVR 401), McGill School of Environment, McGill University. African Field Semester, McGill University. Evolving Earth (ENVR 202), McGill School of Environment, McGill University Field Resource Person for the Masters of Science in Fisheries Program, Makerere University, Summer 2001 and 2002 Vertebrate Zoology (Z00 3303) Department of Zoology, University of Florida. Community Ecology - (PCB 6447), Department of Zoology, University of Florida. Ecological Basis of Tropical Conservation – (Zoo 6927), Department of Zoology, Univ. of Florida. General Ecology - (PCB 4044c), Department of Zoology, University of Florida. Guest Lecturer, Smithsonian Field Course - based in Washington, DC. May 1998. Guest Lecturer, Tropical Biology Association (Darwin Courses in Tropical Biology) - based in Cambridge, England. Every summer since 1994 for 2 courses. Tropical Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida and Makerere University Held at Makerere University Biological Field Station, Uganda 1993, 1994, and 1995. Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology - Biology 654, Department of Biology, McGill University. Wildlife Biology - Department of Zoology, Makerere University, Uganda, taught in conjunction with D. Pomeroy Guest Lecturer for the "Organization of Tropical Studies" taught three years - 1985-1987. Post-Doctoral Colleagues Completed: Marco Campennì Carolyn Hall Goro Hanya Mitchell Irwin Patrick Omeja Jessica Rothman Rafael Reyna-Hurtado Julie Teichroeb Sarah Turner Dennis Twinomugisha Tania Saj Kevina Vulinec Michael Wasserman Students Supervised / Completed: Cedric Worman - Ph.D. University of Florida, April 2012. Anthropogenic community disturbance: General patterns qualifications, and animal-mediated nutrient transport. Now at Francis Marion University. Patrick Omeja – Ph.D. Makerere University, September 2009. Restoration potential of woody tree species in the degraded forest sites in Kibale National Park, Uganda Stacey Hodder – MA McGill University, April 2009 Do colobus monkeys on humanized forest edges exhibit more severe parasite infections than those on non-humanized forest edges? Tamaini Snaith – Ph.D. McGill University, August 2008 Group size and food competition in red colobus monkeys: Addressing the folivore paradox. Dennis Twinomugisha – Ph.D. Makerere University, November 2005. Conservation status and determinants of golden monkey (Cercopithecus mitis kandti) abundance in Mgahinga Gorilla National Park Nat Seavy. - Ph.D. University of Florida – May 2006

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Disturbance and Community Structure. Thomas Gillespie. - Ph.D. University of Florida – May 2004. Effects of Human Disturbance on Primate Parasite Dynamics. Alain Houle. - Ph.D. Université du Québec à Montréal. - December 2003. Mécanismes de coexistence Chez Les Primates Frugivores Du Parc National de Kibale en Ouganda. Claudia M. Stickler. MSc. University of Florida - December 2003. The Effects of Selective Logging on Primate-Habitat Interactions: A Case Study of Redtail Monkeys (Cercopithecus ascanius) in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Amy E. Zanne. - Ph.D. in Zoology, University of Florida - March 2003 Adaptations to Heterogeneous Habitats: Life History Characters of Trees and Shrubs. R. Scot Duncan – Ph.D. in Zoology, University of Florida – May 2001 Tropical Forest Succession: Integrating Theory and Application in Forest Restoration Sophia R. Balcomb – Ph.D. in Zoology, University of Florida – May 2001 Patterns of Seed Dispersal at a Variety of Scales in a Tropical Forest System: Do Post-dispersal Processes Disrupt Patterns Established by Frugivores? John Paul – Masters in Zoology, University of Florida – May 2001. Patterns of seed dispersal by animals: influence on sapling composition in a tropical forest. Tom Gillespie – Masters in Zoology, University of Florida – May 2000 Determinants of Group Size in the Red Colobus Monkey (Procolobus badius): An Evaluation of the Generality of the Ecological Constraints Model. Daphne Onderdonk - Masters in Zoology, University of Florida - May 1998. Coping with Forest Fragmentation: The Primates of Kibale National Park, Uganda. Amy Zanne - Masters in Zoology, University of Florida - April 1998. Expediting Indigenous Regeneration in African Grasslands: Plantations and the Effects of Distance and Isolation from Seed Sources. R. Scot Duncan - Masters in Zoology, University of Florida - April 1997. Seed Dispersal in a Degraded Agricultural Tropical Landscape: The First Steps Towards Reforestation. Christina Allen - Masters, University of Florida (Co-Chair) - February 1997. Frugivores, Palms, and Conservation in Amazonia. Lisa Naughton-Treves - Ph.D. University of Florida (Co-Chair) - April 1996. Uneasy Neighbors: Wildlife and Farmers Around Kibale National Park. Virginia Shepherd - Masters in Zoology, University of Florida - April 1996. The Role of Dung Beetles as Secondary Seed Dispersers in Kibale National Park, Uganda. David Terry – Masters in Science Teaching in Zoology, University of Florida - April 1995. W. Olupot - Masters in Zoology, Makerere University - June 1993. Range Patterns of Gray-Cheeked Mangabeys (Cercocebus albigena) with Special Reference to Food Finding and Food Availability in Kibale Forest. In progress: McGill University Post-Doc Valerie Schoof Ph.D. Jan Gogarten, Tyler Bonnell Makerere University, Uganda Ph.D. Sam Mugume, Alex Tumukunde M.Sc. Dan Tuli, Dorothy Kirumira