Hello from primatologist, anthropologist, educatorsteemCreated with Sketch.

in introduceyourself •  7 years ago 

There's lots of wonderful and quirky science content on steemit, I thought I'd jump right in! Here's my quick personal introduction with a focus on my research.

I'm a graduate student getting a PhD in biological anthropology. I’m especially curious about how primates manage to get enough nutrients in challenging circumstances, and why this might impact the evolution of traits like teeth, aging, or sociality.

me in fieldI use some telemetry equipment to track down some monkeys wearing radio collars in Argentina. Photo cred to my friend Greg K

While my job might sound like someone's in an ecology and evolutionary biology department, on a daily basis I tend to interact with people studying things like Homo erectus fossils, genetics of high altitude adaptation, or the evolution of menopause. Such different interests can make for pretty eclectic meetings, but question that unites us is "How did humans evolve? "

Primates have an important role in understanding human evolution. If we say something is unique in humans, we first must test that hypothesis by looking at our closest relatives. As a result, a lot of old ideas of what made humans unique have had to be cast aside.

Termite fishingAt first, we thought only humans used tools and that this is what separated us from other animals. Jane Goodall observed chimpanzees fishing for termites back in the 1960’s. In response, anthropologist Richard Leakey said, “Now we must redefine tool, redefine Man, or accept chimpanzees as humans.” I always find it shocking that we didn’t know what our closest relatives were up to until we had already put a man on the moon.

Homology2.gifA science gif I created. My first! Too fast? Too slow? How can I make it more clear? Sorry if you stumble across in the middle, it's kinda long. Please comment below :)

As a result, there are anthropologists who study primates all over the world (let’s call them primatologists, but not all primatologists are necessarily interested in humans). I’ve been lucky to work at several field sites all over the world.

Slide01.jpg Some primates I've studied in the wild: owl monkeys (Aotus azarae) in Argentina, red leaf-monkeys (Presbytis rubicunda) in Indonesia, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in Uganda. Many primate fieldsites have been in operation for decades to study these long lived primates. Walk through a tropical forest, and you have a pretty decent chance of running into a primatologist.

Right now, I’m doing a long-term project in Uganda on chimpanzees. Chimpanzees are especially long-lived primates, reaching older than 60 years in the wild. Because most research has focused on prime-aged adults, we don’t know much about how they age. I’m studying a community to determine the feeding challenges faced by old apes and how they solve them.

We expect animals to behave differently over their lifespan to continue maximizing their reproductive success, but this hasn’t really been documented for old primates. Maybe, these old individuals keep trying to act like primate-age adults until the day they die, or alternatively, they adopt new strategies to deal with all the physical challenges of aging.

This is a female chimpanzee named Ma Rainey. She passed away recently at an estimated age of 57. Just look at that old face!!

To research this, I spend time following wild chimpanzees around. Sometimes it’s exciting, like when there’s big social drama like a patrol. Other times, it’s really boring, like when you’re with a solitary chimp who decides to nap for the afternoon.

But I’m not always following chimpanzees. Being a grad student means I spend the school year teaching at my university. Honestly, it’s one of the best parts of my job. Don’t believe everything you hear: college students can be polite, curious, and critical thinkers who care about more than their GPA.

LectureFormat.png One of the biggest challenges for higher education is to move beyond the limited lecture format, which can create gulfs between students and teachers, and reinforce existing biases in higher ed. I recommend this article, Are college lectures unfair? Experiential education FTW!

Thanks for being such a welcoming community that I felt excited to post this! I’m considering doing future posts on topics like: Why study primates? / Evolution of aging and Chimpanzees / Documentary portrayals of chimpanzees / Common misconceptions of human evolution. If you like any of these or have other suggestions, please comment and let me know.

Cheers steemit,
benfink

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Welcome to steemit. We look forward to you sharing your growing expertise in primatology with us all!

thanks @steemstem! I'll see what I can produce and am glad to learn about your steem-science-hub!

Well, well... Welcome to Steemit @benfink! Great to have you onboard brother ;)

continuing our fickel search for where architecture and primatology overlap

Welcome to steemit! :)
I am looking forward to read more from you!

What a fascinating first post. Welcome to Steemit and we're glad to have you here!

Welcome to steemit @benfink. Followed, and looking forward to what you have to share.

brilliant. thanks for the follow and happy to join the SteemSTEM community

Welcome to Steemit, @benfink. I'm looking forward to read more from you and decided to follow you as well. :-)

excellent, thanks @hagbardceline and followed back! digging the epidemiology posts

Welcome to Steemit, benfink! I'm looking forward to seeing more posts about your research, and primates in general! :)

you got it, @valth! let me know if anything about primates in particular catches your fancy

sounds like some exciting work

A big welcome @benfink! Your job sounds pretty interesting, or at least your findings are. I look forward to learning more, I didn't realize how much I would enjoy learning about primate behavior itself as well as for insight into humans.

thanks @natureofbeing - if there's any particular aspects of primate behavior you're keen to learn more about, don't hesitate to let me know! building my list of potential post topics

Thanks I will speak up if I have questions!

Hey @benfink, welcome to Steem :-)

Im already a fan on your page. Love following your adventure!

Welcome to Steemit ! Beautiful post.

Hello @benfink, welcome to Steem! :-)

That's a lot of monkey-business.

But seriously, very interesting stuff. I look forward to seeing progress on your work here on steemit.

Upvoting this and I'm going to follow you.
@shayne

glad to hear @shayne, followed back and looking forward to checking out more of your posts

Welcome and followed! Looking forward to more posts. Your area of research and all the travel you have done sounds so interesting.

thanks for commenting and following @vir! backatcha

hello @benfink welcome to steemit

Bienvenido!

Welcome to Steemit!

Glad to have you onboard. There's a lot of value Steemit could deliver to academics generally, and your presence here is certainly a sign of that.

Welcome!

big thanks @zurvanic! looking forward to exploring this platform and thinking about new ways to present my research. I'd love to hear your thoughts on steemit and academics

Very interesting welcome post. I will follow you!

thanks @bart2305! follow backatcha

Welcome to Steemit! We need more content like yours here definitely! All the best and thanks for this share. Upvote :)

much appreciated @alexcote!

Welcome. Looks like you have some pretty exciting stories to tell

Happy to see you joining this community and bringing more science content in. I'd definitely be interested in posts on Common misconceptions of human evolution.

hi @borislavzlatanov! thanks for the comment. in that case, you might be in luck, I did my first post on a few misconceptions here!

Hi @benfink ! Welcome to the steemians' community . I think you are interesting person. its great pleasure to see you here . lets be in touch . Happy Steeming !!

thank you! it's a pleasure to join the community

Welcome !

welcome to steemit @benfink. so glad to have your personality in this platform, looking forward to more of your posts.

followed you.

thanks, frank!

nice

Very nice introducing post! And interessting content. Thank you and welcome :)

Welcome onboard @benfink - glad to have you here. Inspired to get another friend who's doing something similar to what you're doing, maybe i'll forward him your intro :)

Sometimes it’s exciting, like when there’s big social drama like a patrol.

What's this about btw??

thanks @kevinwong!

Ooo patrols are awesome. Chimpanzees are territorial and sometimes part of a group will walk along the borders of their range. Unlike usual, they get all quiet, listening carefully for signs of neighboring groups. If they come across a member of another group, they'll sometimes attack. Instances of chimpanzee violence more often occur around patrols. The reasons they do this aren't entirely clear, but it seems they might be able to a) gain new territory to increase resources, b) improve their safety by deterring the other groups from infringing on territory, c) recruiting new females into their community.

4patrol.jpg
Image by John Mitani

For more, you can check out this video or articles like this one, Mitani & Watts 2004