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- Publications
- Influence
Eat or be Eaten: Dangers in the dark: Are some nocturnal primates afraid of the dark?
- S. Bearder, K. Nekaris, Courtney A. Buzzell
- Biology
- 2002
Primate conservation: measuring and mitigating trade in primates
- V. Nijman, K. Nekaris, G. Donati, M. Bruford, J. E. Fa
- Biology
- 16 February 2011
Trade in primates is seen as a significant impediment to their conservation. Primates are traded both domestically and internationally, in order to supply, amongst others, biomedical industries and… Expand
The Little Fireface Project: Community Conservation of Asia’s Slow Lorises via Ecology, Education, and Empowerment
- K. Nekaris
- Geography
- 2016
Slow lorises, small nocturnal primates found throughout Southeast Asia, are threatened by the illegal trade for pets, medicines, and tourist photo props. Being the only venomous primate, traders cut… Expand
Compassionate conservation, rehabilitation and translocation of Indonesian slow lorises
- R. Moore, Wihermanto, K. Nekaris
- Biology
- 1 December 2014
With the number of threatened species in rescue centres rising, scientific reports on the functioning and success of such centres is essential. Compassionate conservation tries to bridge the gap… Expand
Habitat use by western purple-faced langurs Trachypithecus vetulus nestor (Colobinae) in a fragmented suburban landscape.
- R. S. Moore, K. Nekaris, Caitlin L Eschmann
- Biology
- 20 September 2010
As natural habitats around the globe disappear, humans and non-human primates become increasingly engaged in complex interactions, both peaceful and hostile. Sri Lanka's endemic western purple-faced… Expand
Media attention promotes conservation of threatened Asian slow lorises
- K. Nekaris, N. Campbell
- Geography
- 1 April 2012
Trade in Common Palm Civet Paradoxurus hermaphroditus in Javan and Balinese markets, Indonesia
- V. Nijman, D. Spaan, E. J. Rode-Margono, P. D. Roberts, K. Nekaris
- Geography
- 2014
Wildlife trade is a major threat to wild populations of many species, especially in South-east Asia. In Indonesia, Common Palm Civet Paradoxurus hermaphroditus has become increasingly exploited as an… Expand
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Temporal niche separation between the two ecologically similar nocturnal primates Avahi meridionalis and Lepilemur fleuretae
- Marco Campera, Michela Balestri, Marianna Chimienti, V. Nijman, K. Nekaris, G. Donati
- Biology
- 9 April 2019
Time is considered a resource in limited supply, and temporal niche separation is one of the most common strategies that allow ecologically similar species to live in sympatry. Mechanisms of temporal… Expand
Climate-mediated activity of the Javan Slow Loris, Nycticebus javanicus
- K. Reinhardt, Wirdateti, K. Nekaris
- Geography
- 21 April 2016
Joint impacts of anthropogenic disturbance and climate change are of pressing concern for modern conservationists. Climate change patterns have various diminishing effects on the biodiversity of an… Expand
Trade and ethnozoological use of African lorisiforms in the last 20 years
- M. Svensson, D. Ingram, K. Nekaris, V. Nijman
- Geography
- 29 December 2015
Trade in primates is considered a major impediment to primate conservation globally. The bushmeat trade in West and Central Africa is considered largely unsustainable and represents one of the main… Expand