<<

CICASP 10th Anniversary and PWS 12th International Symposium Venue: Visitor Center at Japan Centre, Inuyama

20th September (Fri) 21st September (Sat) 22nd September (Sun) 9:00 (5min) PWS faculty meeting (10min) Presentation award ceremony

(90min) Wildlife Research in Uganda (120min) 10 years of CICASP: Making an Impact Within 25min x 3 + 15min x1 and Beyond Academia in a Global Community 9:30 Eric Sande 25min x 3 + 20min x 1 + 15min x 1 + 10min x 1 Charles Masembe

Moses Chermourt Andrew MacIntosh, 10:00 Shintaro Ishizuka Cintia Garai, Ryu Heungjin, Hikaru Wakamori David Hill, Fred Bercovitch ( 10:30 Session Chair: Chie Hashimoto) (Session Chair: Andrew MacIntosh) (10m in) Coffee break 11:00 (75min) Behavior & Ecology 15min x 5 (10 min) Coffee break Nachiketha Sharma, Kim Mi Yeon, Mike Huffman 11:30 (30 min) Onsite-Lab 15min x 2 (Chair: Satoshi Hirata) Himani Nautiyal, Sota Inoue Makerere Univ., Sorbonne-Nouvelle Univ. Registration Open (Session Chair: Takushi Kishida) (10 min) Closing remarks (Testuro Matsuzawa) 12:00 Group photo & Lunch break

( light meals and soft drinks) (60min) Lunch break 12:30 (30m in) MOU between PWS and Mont-bell

13:00 (10 min) Opening remarks (IDANI Gen'ichi) (55m in) Human- Conflict (60 min) Buddha Seminar (Ministry of the Environment)

(95m in) in the lab and field 25min x 1 + 15min x 2 [In Japanese] 13:30 25min x2+ 15min x 3 Helena Freitas,Raquel Costa, Otsuka Ryoma ッセミナー環境省インーンシッ報告

Simone Pika (Session Chair: Satoshi Hirata) 進行:福島誠子, 報告者:越智咲穂 , 義村弘仁 , 鳥井朋恵 14:00 Yuri Kawaguchi, Shenwen Xu, Nelson Broche (10min) Coffee break

Alexander Weiss 14:30 (95min) Evolution & Ecology I (Session Chair: Yuko Hattori) 25min x 2 + 15min x 3

(15min) Coffee break Anthony Tosi, Richard Meindl 15:00 (120min(120min+) Commu Coffeenicating break) SciSciCence:om Expesessiort nPanel on Danielle Jones, Cody Ruiz, Xu Zhihong (120min) Conserv' Session

Engaging the Media, the Public, and Policy Makers 15:30 Panelists: David Kornhauser (Panel Moderator) (Session Chair: Ikuma Adachi)

Raymond Kunikane Terhune, Kei Kano, (10min) Coffee break 16:00 Ayumi Koso, Amanda Alvarez ((70min)70min) KentEvo lUniutioversityn & E cStateolog yand II PRI Ⅱ

225min5min x1x 1+ 15min+ 15m xin 3 x 3 16:30 Facilitators: Andrew MacIntosh, Susumu Tomiya Wilson Chung,, HTieanmen Tianmen He,g, Wany Wanyeee LLeeee

Take Makiko (Session Chair: Lira Yu) (Session Chair: Susumu Tomiya) Michael Huffman (Session Chair: Lira Yu) 17:00

(30m in) Coffee break & preparing for poster session (30 min) Coffee break & preparing for poster session 17:30 Poster session Poster session 18:00 (li ght meals and soft drinks) Get-together Party (meals and drinks) 18:30

19:00 Nerd Nite "A journey through time" 19:30 @ Rest Area, JMC ( meals and drinks) 20:00

20:30

21:00

JMC Monkeys in Chicago ▼Zoo Hours MAP① Visitor Centre, Museum Shop, Changing/ We are delighted that our eight JMC Japanese monkeys +Englishu Nursing Facilities are very happy in their new home in Chicago. For us, 10:00 – 17:00 (Nov. – Feb.: 10:00 – 16:00) At the Visitor Centre, we have regular exhibitions these monkeys are an expression of the friendship and Closed on Tuesday and Wednesday; and some additional including taxidermist specimens, skeletons of collaboration between the United States and Japan. For weekdays in January and February (open on public nonhuman primates, and a touch screen monitor to holidays and in high season). Please check the calendar in more info, please visit snowmonkeys.org perform a memory test for chimpanzees at the our website before your visit. Research Institute, Kyoto University. We also ▼Donate JAPAN MONKEY CENTRE hold special exhibitions on a wide variety of different ▼Admission Prices themes. Help us to help primates Museum and Zoo for Nonhuman Primates One Day Ticket MAP② Madagascar House Your donation will enable us to let our primates live a Adults Elementary and Junior Preschool This outdoor enclosure is in the form of an island rich, interesting, and happy life. It further helps their High School Students Children Our Mission ringed by a deep moat, allowing the inhabitants to fellow primates living in the wild. (Ages 3 - 6) roam freely. Living on the island-enclosure are three different species of lemurs found in the wild only in 800 yen 400 yen 300 yen “A Window to Nature” Madagascar: brown lemurs, black lemurs, and ruffed Providing Quality Care for Our Primates Under 2, Free . We are committed to optimising the welfare of our lemurs The Japan Monkey Centre (JMC) was founded in 1956 primates every day. We do so by asking ourselves ▼JMC Membership for primate research and conservation. Its other main MAP③ South American House every morning: “What can we do today to make their Here you can see tiny monkeys such as marmosets JMC membership provides great benefits and privileges goal is to give all interested people a wealth of life even better?" There are new ideas and challenges throughout the whole year. You get free admission to the and tamarins. They live in an indoor enclosure information on their closest relatives. JMC runs a every day, and for maintaining the physical and mental JMC, free parking, as well as special access to members- maintained at a temperature of about 25°C to unique zoo housing the world’s largest number of well-being of our primates, we need your help. Please only events. simulate tropical jungle conditions. In the outdoor support our primates and make a donation easily via nonhuman primate species and attracts visitors from enclosure, you can meet saki monkeys, woolly the online donation form. Adults Elementary and Junior Preschool all over the world. monkeys, spider monkeys, and capuchins living in URL: https://fundexapp.jp/monkey/entry.php?lang=ENG High School Students Children South America. In a special room where day and night (Ages 3 - 6) light is reversed, nocturnal owl monkeys can be seen Conservation of Natural Habitats 3000 yen 2000 yen 1500 yen moving about during our daytime. The wild habitat of primates is vanishing at an alarming MAP④ Asian House pace. That means, many of them will be extinct by the Supporters: access to exclusive supporters’ website time our children have grownup. There are many ways Japanese , also known as snow monkeys, 5000 yen & Up to fight this development. Our approach is, together and living at the northern limit of the global range of with the local governments and people, to support the all nonhuman primates, can be seen here, along with conservation and sustainable development of these ▼Access other Asian monkeys such as rhesus macaques, toque habitats. But we can achieve this goal only with your The train station closest to the Japan Monkey Centre is the macaques, bonnet macaques, lion-tailed macaques, generous support. Meitetsu Inuyama Station; less than 30 min train-ride from pig-tailed macaques, Tibetan macaques, and Donor names will be posted in the JMC, on our Nagoya Station. From Meitetsu Inuyama Station (East exit) Francois’s lutongs. website and printed in our newsletter (unless you wish to the Japan Monkey Centre, it takes 5 min by bus or taxi, MAP⑤ Wao Land to remain anonymous). Please let us know by or 20 min walking. One of JMC’s must-see attractions are the free-ranging specifying this on your application form. ring-tailed lemurs, offering a close encounter with JAPAN MONKEY CENTRE them. Tax Breaks for Residents of Japan 26 Kanrin, Inuyama, Aichi 484-0081 Japan MAP⑥⑦ African Centre / Nocturnal Monkeys The Japan Monkey Centre (JMC) is a 'Public Interest Tel: +81 (0)568 61 2327 Another star attraction is a chimpanzee family. You Incorporated Foundation', certified by the Japanese Fax.: +81 (0) 568 62 6823 can also see a gorilla searching for his meals, parts of Government to be acting in the public interest. www.japanmonkeycentre.org which the keepers hide earlier in various places within Therefore, all donations to the JMC are eligible for tax twitter.com/JpnMonkeyCentre the enclosure. Here you can also watch and breaks: deductible from your taxable income for 動物取扱業:公益財団法人日本モンキーセンター 愛知県犬山市大字犬山字官林 26 番地 nocturnal monkeys including pottos and lesser slow income tax. 業種:展示 動尾第 510 号 業種:貸出し 動尾第 509 号 登録:平成 19 年 5 月 31 日 有効:平成 34 年 5 月 30 日 取扱責任者:木村直人 lorises. 2018.11.03

MAP⑧ African House This house shows brightly-colored monkeys including hamadryas . Colobus monkeys presents their Visitor Centre strikingly beautiful black and white markings. You can also meet Schmidt's , moustached guenons, 10 9 patas monkeys, savannah monkeys, and Barbary 1 macaques here. 2 3 4 6 MAP⑨ Castle Over seventy Anubis baboons can be watched from 5 this rooftop viewing deck. 11 11-2 7 MAP⑩ Monkey Valley From this observation platform, you can see about 160 13 Japanese Yaku-macaques, showing the behavior of 8 washing sweet potatoes and other food in a pond. 11-3 They put the sweet potatoes inside the water and rub 11-1 15 Main Gate them against rocks. Sweet potato washing in Japanese Wheel Chair macaques was first observed in a natural troop in Stroller Rental Toilet Koshima Islet, Japan. Though rubbing behavior is quite common in macaques, the behavior of rubbing objects 12 Multi-purpose Toilet in water is rare. It can be easily observed during the 2 3 4 5 6 7 Temporary monkeys’ feeding time. You may also see other Gathering Location interesting behaviors like Saru-dango, tool use, and noise making with stones. AED From the late December until the end of February, on Changing Board weekends and holidays, our Japanese Yaku-macaques warm themselves by a real bonfire. The tradition of Changing/Nursing lighting bonfires for the monkeys began in 1957, after 8 9 10 11 11-2 12 Facilities Japanese Yaku-macaques were observed to gather 14 Lockers around the fires lit by staff to burn fallen trees following the Isewan Typhoon. This new ‘bonfire- Museum Shop season’ soon became established as a well-known and cherished attraction of JMC. Food and Drink

MAP⑪ Monkey Scramble To Monkey Park (Amusement park) Smoking Area Here, you can enjoy siamangs brachiating (moving by To Bus Stop Rest Area swinging arm by arm) at a height of 15 meters (MAP11-1: ). Very impressing are also the Big Loop Geoffroy's spider monkeys moving back and forth across a 100-meter-long suspension bridge (MAP11-3: they spend a large amount of time foraging for insects. It is MAP⑬ KIDSZOO/Tree House impression of how monkeys see the world from the Monkey Skyway). Don't forget to look up to see one of rare for any insects that have strayed into the Squirrel In the ‘KIDSZOO’ there are many fluffy such as treetops. our greatest attractions — and keep an eye out for Monkey Land to ever reach the adult stage. degus, guinea pigs and rabbits. You can meet exotic monkey excrements! (Dangerous Zone) animals such as Madagascar hissing cockroaches and MAP⑭ Restaurant Rakuen MAP⑫ Gibbons' House leopard geckos, and from our local wildlife beetles and MAP ⑪-2 Squirrel Monkey Land Here you can see four different species of gibbons from other insects that are popular with children. One of our highlights is a close encounter with Bolivian Southeast Asia: agile gibbons, pileated gibbons, white- MAP⑮ Monkey Bar squirrel monkeys, moving freely within the dense handed gibbons, and Mueller's gibbons. Our zookeepers added yet another attraction: a new (Open on weekends and holidays) undergrowth on a small island. Of all their food, Tree House. Looking down from the Tree House gives an Bolivian squirrel monkeys love to eat insects most. So,

The 12th International Symposium on Primatology and Wildlife Science

PROGRAM

All events (except Nerd Nite) will take place in the Visitor Centre.

Day 1 (Friday, September 20)

Time Abstract (min) Title Speaker Affiliation

11:30–12:30 Registration

12:30–13:00 (30) MOU between PWS and Mont-bell Wildlife Research IDANI 13:00 13:10 (10) Opening Remarks Center, Kyoto – Gen'ichi University Primates in the Lab and in the Field Chair: Yuko Hattori Institute for Simone Cognitive Science, 13:10 13:35 O-1 (25) The Loango Chimpanzee Project – Pika University of Osnabrück Primate Research The role of facial shape and color in chimpanzee's Yuri 13:35 13:50 O-2 (15) Institute, Kyoto – attention to infant Kawaguchi University Primate Research Shenwen 13:50 14:05 O-3 (15) Video real world matching in chimpanzees Institute, Kyoto – – Xu University Primate Research Creating a multicultural video resource for Nelson 14:05 14:20 O-4 (15) Institute, Kyoto – archiving the history of primatology in Japan Broche University Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto Personality variation in wild male chimpanzees is Alexander 14:20 14:45 O-5 (25) University; – maintained by its changing association with rank Weiss University of Edinburgh 14:45–15:00 (15) Communicating Science: Expert Panel on Engaging the Media, the Public, and Policy Makers Chair: Susumu Tomiya

Panelists: David Kornhauser (Panel Moderator), Raymond Kunikane Terhune, Kei Kano, Ayumi Koso, Amanda Alvarez 15:00–17:00 S-1 (120) Facilitators: Andrew MacIntosh, Susumu Tomiya

17:00–17:30 (30) Poster Session & Visual Storytelling Contest

17:30–18:30 [All posters in Visitor Center; light meals & soft drinks provided] Nerd Nite Inuyama #4: A Journey through Time

19:00–21:00 (doors open at 18:30) [Rest Area next to restaurant Rakuden; meals & drinks provided]

1

Day 2 (Saturday, September 21)

Time Abstract (min) Title Speaker Affiliation 9:00–9:05 PWS Faculty Meeting Wildlife Research in Uganda Chair: Chie Hashimoto

9:05–9:30 O-6 (25) Progress on On-site Laboratory setting in Uganda Eric Sande Makerere University

Molecular Genetics and evolutionary research at Charles 9:30 9:55 O-7 (25) Makerere University – Makerere University Masembe

Is habitat disturbance in Itwara and Matiri forests Moses 9:55 10:20 O-8 (25) affecting primate populations? An analysis of Makerere University – Chermourt threats Why are intergroup relationships non-antagonistic Primate Research Shintaro 10:20 10:35 O-9 (15) in bonobos?: Implications from recent genetic Institute, Kyoto – Ishizuka studies University

10:35–10:45 (10) Behavior & Ecology Chair: Takushi Kishida Wildlife Research Testing Motivational structure hypothesis by using Nachiketha 10:45 11:00 O-10 (15) Center, Kyoto – Asian elephant vocalizations Sharma University First vocalization study of wild Indo-Pacific Wildlife Research Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) at Jeju Kim Mi 11:00 11:15 O-11 (15) Center, Kyoto – Island, Republic of Korea: Whistle characteristics Yeon University and its response to ambient noise. Primate Research Making Sri Lankan toque macaques' long tails Michael 11:15 11:30 O-26 (15) Institute, Kyoto – short the chilling details Huffman — University Interaction between free-ranging dogs and Central Primate Research Himani 11:30 11:45 O-13 (15) Himalayan langur: An assessment of anti-predator Institute, Kyoto – Nautiyal behavioral strategy University Wildlife Research 11:45–12:00 O-14 (15) Collective departure in feral horses Sota Inoue Center, Kyoto University

12:00–13:00 (60) [light meals & soft drinks provided]

Human–Animal Conflict Chair: Satoshi Hirata Centre for Helena Functional Ecology, 13:00 13:25 O-15 (25) Understanding the threats to wildlife in Africa – Freitas University of Coimbra Primate Research The impact of Ecotourism in the behaviour of Raquel 13:25 13:40 O-16 (15) Institute, Kyoto – mountain gorilla in Bwindi National Park, Uganda Costa University Popularity of YouTube Contents that Violate the Ryoma ASAFAS, Kyoto 13:40 13:55 O-17 (15) Tourism Regulations May Undermine – Otsuka University Conservation of Mountain Gorillas

13:55–14:05 (10)

2

Evolution & Ecology I Chair: Ikuma Adachi Evidence for multiple episodes of hybridization in Anthony Kent State 14:05 14:30 O-18 (25) the phylogenetic history of guenons (tribe – Tosi University Cercopithecini) Sampling the biodemographies of Richard Kent State 14:30 14:55 O-19 (25) lineages provides understanding of the success of – Meindl University early hominids Investigating the neural basis of macaque social diversity: A comparison of cell density and Danielle Kent State 14:55 15:10 O-20 (15) – serotonergic innervation of the amygdala among Jones University four species

Molecular Genetics of Macaque Reproductive Kent State 15:10 15:25 O-21 (15) Cody Ruiz – Biology University

Impact of excluding age-sex classes of individuals Primate Research 15:25–15:40 O-22 (15) from social network on the relationship between Zhihong Xu Institute, Kyoto network centrality and parasite load University

15:40–15:50 (10) Evolution & Ecology II Chair: Lira Yu

Developmental Epigenetics of Mammalian Fertility: Wilson Kent State 15:50 16:15 O-23 (25) – The Kallmann syndrome case Chung University

Primate Research Effects of Food Toughness on Chewing Efficiency Tianmeng 16:15 16:30 O-24 (15) Institute, Kyoto – in Yakushima Japanese Macaques He University Primate Research Wanyee 16:30 16:45 O-25 (15) Evaluating Japanese macaques’ reliance on Institute, Kyoto – anthropogenic food by gut microbiome profile Lee University Primate Research Fruit species choice by Golden-faced saki, an Makiko 16:45 17:00 O-12 (15) Institute, Kyoto – Take Amazonian “seed predator” University

17:00–17:30 (30) Poster Session & Visual Storytelling Contest

17:30–18:30 [All posters in Visitor Center] Get-together Party & Award Presentation

18:30–20:30 [Visitor Center; light meals & drinks provided]

3

Day 3 (Sunday, September 22)

Time Abstract (min) Title Speaker Affiliation 9:00–9:10 Presentation award ceremony 10 years of CICASP: Making an Impact Within and Beyond Academia in a Global Community Chair: A. MacIntosh Primate Research Andrew 9:10 9:20 S-2 (10) 10 Years and Counting: from CICASP to the World Institute, Kyoto – MacIntosh University Wildlife Messengers; Ekolo Applying Science and Filmmaking in Conservation Cintia 9:20 9:40 O-27 (20) ya Bonobo/Lola ya – in DRC Garai Bonobo/Amis des Bonobos du Congo Working in a Governmental Institute: Balancing Primate Research Heungjin 9:40 10:00 O-28 (20) between our own Research Interests and Project Institute, Kyoto – Ryu Aims University

Hikaru Tama Zoological 10:00 10:20 O-29 (20) Working at Tama Zoological Park – Wakamori Park

Wildlife Research Ecological consultancy and wildlife conservation in 10:20 10:45 O-30 (25) David Hill Center, Kyoto – the U.K. University

The Trail Connecting Sexual Selection in Baboons Fred 10:45 11:10 O-31 (25) Save The Giraffes – with Conservation Biology in Giraffes Bercovitch

11:10–11:20 (10) Uganda Onsite-Lab Chair: Satoshi Hirata Wildlife Research Satoshi 11:20 11:35 O-32 (15) Comparative Cognitive Science Laboratory Center, Kyoto – Hirata University

11:35–11:50 (15) TBD

Tetsuro PWS Program 11:50 12:00 (10) Closing Remarks – Matsuzawa Coordinator

Buddha Seminar

13:00–14:00 環境省インターンシップ報告 [in Japanese]

4

Poster Sessions (5:30-6:30PM, September 20 & 21, JMC Visitor Center)

Sealed lips don't deceive: lips coloration informs about P-1 Lucie Rigaill ovulation probability

P-2 James Brooks Modulation of Great Ape Social Attention by Oxytocin

Does plant intake promote hair evacuation in captive P-3 Hiroto Yoshimura snow leopards?

Characterization of bitter taste sensitivity of four species P-4 Xiaochan Yan of Sulawesi macaques

Relationships between diet and trails of forest elephant P-5 Mayuko Nomoto in and around Moukalaba-Doudou National Park, Gabon

Does the tooth shape of macaque provide taxonomic P-6 Mao Asami character?

Group Size Estimation of Finless porpoises by Aerial P-7 Tomoe Torii Videos

Chimpanzees can detect strangeness in bodies: an eye- P-8 Jie Gao tracking study

Boundaries between humans and captive chimpanzees: P-9 Vanessa Gris two cases of intensive care in Japan

Perception of object texture in chimpanzees and P-10 Mikuho Yokoyama humans: A research plan

Does size matter? Examining the possible mechanisms P-11 Pandora Pinto and adaptive significance of single and multi-male groups in horse societies

Social influences on allogrooming behavior in wild P-12 Morgane Allanic bonobos at Wamba, DRC

Do chimpanzees’ sleep patterns change with age? P-13 Kristin Havercamp Looking back a decade

Preliminary behavioral survey of bonobos in Mbali, P-14 Ena Onishi savanna-forest mosaic environment

5

Great apes’ understanding of biomechanically possible P-15 Yutaro Sato and impossible body movements

Preliminary DNA analysis using non-invasive samples P-16 Huiyuan Qi from captive snow leopards in Japan’s zoos

A bonobo at Wamba captured a duiker, but did not eat it P-17 Takumasa Yokoyama – implication for their “prey image”

Genetic diversity of the Japanese golden eagle at P-18 Annegret Moto Naito microsatellite and major histocompatibility complex loci

Investigating Olfactory Receptors in Hystricomorpha, a P-19 Scott Jenkins Suborder of Rodentia

Auditory enrichment in two primate species kept in the P-20 Diana Silva Maia Zoo: Common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) and ( sabaeus)

Effects of substrate change in bar-hanging behavior in P-21 Josue Alejandro Pastrana the Takahama group at the Primate Research Institute

Investigation of Social Structure and The Function of P-22 Sakiho Ochi Acoustic Communication to Maintain Social Relationship in Free-ranging Horses (Equus caballus) Coordination of trunk motion during bipedal walking in P-23 Yuki Kinoshita the frontal plane: a comparison between human, white- handed gibbon and Antagonistic interactions and spatial relationships P-24 Kazuya Toda between immigrant and resident females in Wamba bonobos

mtDNA and microsatellite analyses of the Ryukyu flying P-25 Yuto Taki fox

Multilevel structure in feral horse society: Evidence from P-26 Tamao Maeda aerial observation using drones

What are the implications of tree cover loss for P-27 Maegan Fitzgerald chimpanzees and humans across the greater Nimba landscape in Guinea

Mainland versus island adaptation: Impacts and P-28 Halmi Insani consequences on body size and biodiversity of primates

Lack of confidence? Here are new tools to assess your P-29 Kenneth Keuk network uncertainty

6

Poster board set-up

Note: You can: (A) leave your poster on the poster board overnight, from Friday evening until the end of the Get- together Party on Saturday; or (B) if you don’t want to leave your poster unattended, take it down after the poster session on Friday ant put it up again on Saturday for the second poster session. Keep in mind that all JMC visitors, not just symposium attendees, will be able to see the posters that are on display during the day.

Please take down your poster after the Get-together Party on Saturday.

Exhibit cases

Exhibit cases Exhibit cases Exhibit

P-27

P-28 P-13

P-29

Exhibit cases

on on this side Scientific Visual ScientificVisual Stories

Gift shop

To Lecture Hall Rest area

Visitor Center Entrance

7