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Bonaventura Majolo

Researcher at University of Lincoln

Publications -  93
Citations -  2828

Bonaventura Majolo is an academic researcher from University of Lincoln. The author has contributed to research in topics: Animal ecology & Macaca sylvanus. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 89 publications receiving 2295 citations. Previous affiliations of Bonaventura Majolo include University of Stirling & Liverpool John Moores University.

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Responses to social and environmental stress are attenuated by strong male bonds in wild macaques.

TL;DR: Results indicate that male Barbary macaques employ a tend-and-befriend coping strategy in the face of increased environmental as well as social day-to-day stressors, broadening the generality of the social buffering hypothesis.
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Costs and benefits of group living in primates: group size effects on behaviour and demography

TL;DR: It is indicated that folivores and frugivores face similar ecological pressures and the costs of living in larger groups balance or outweigh the benefits, and the effect of group size on behaviour and fitness is analyzed.
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Impacts of tourism on anxiety and physiological stress levels in wild male Barbary macaques

TL;DR: Investigating impacts of tourism on wild male Barbary macaques in Morocco suggests that while tourist presence and interactions with the macaques elevate the study animals’ anxiety levels, only aggressive interactions are sufficient to elicit a detectable increase in a measure of physiological stress.
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Fitness-related benefits of dominance in primates.

TL;DR: The view that dominance hierarchies are a key aspect of primate societies as they indeed provide a number of fitness-related benefits to individuals is supported.
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Reciprocation and interchange in wild Japanese macaques: grooming, cofeeding, and agonistic support.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed grooming distribution among wild female Japanese macaques living in two groups on Yakushima and found that grooming was highly reciprocated (i.e., exchanged in kind) and directed up the hierarchy in both groups.