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Dr. Ammie Kalan

Assistant professor

Anthropology

Contact:
Office: COR B213 250-721-7058
Credentials:
University of Leipzig/IMPRS (Germany)
Area of expertise:
Biological anthropology, primate behavioural ecology, animal communication, animal cultures, tool use, wildlife conservation, bioacoustics, camera trapping

Bio

I am a field-based primatologist interested in the social and ecological drivers of behavioural flexibility in wild great apes, and what this can tell us about hominin evolution using a comparative perspective. 

In particular, I research behavioural flexibility as it relates to the domains of communication, tool use, foraging ecology and nonhuman cultural traditions. I also seek to improve our understanding of the behavioural strategies primates use to adapt and survive in increasingly anthropogenic environments and under climate change.

To date, my research has focussed on wild populations of great apes across Africa, where I also work to improve remote methods for studying these animals in the field, such as passive acoustic monitoring and camera trapping. This research has led me to expand my interest in great apes to the behavioural ecology and conservation of other nonhuman primate species as well.

I currently collaborate with directors of multiple African great ape field sites and I remain an affiliated researcher with the Pan African Programme: , as well as a Scientific Moderator of , the PanAf’s community science project. I encourage any prospective students or postgraduates to contact me directly after checking out my website.

Interests

  • primate communication
  • primate tool use
  • animal culture
  • bioacoustics
  • camera trapping
  • primate conservation

Courses

  • ANTH 250 Biological Anthropology
  • ANTH 252 Primates, People & Society (forthcoming)
  • ANTH 350 Primate Behaviour & Conservation
  • ANTH 450 Advanced Seminar in Primate Behaviour & Cognition

Current projects

Chimpanzee AST is rare among wild populations and may represent a new cultural behaviour found only in West Africa.

In collaboration with acoustic engineers (PRISM lab, CNRS & Aix-Marseille University) we showed that chimpanzees choose tree species that are optimal for sound production and therefore the behaviour appears important for communication.

Additional ongoing projects by GAB Lab members include 3D modeling of AST sites to describe and digitally preserve AST sites, spatial distribution of AST sites, and investigating archaeological signatures of AST (in collaboration with Lydia Luncz, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology).

I am also interested in the kinematics of chimpanzee throwing and comparing this to other hominids, both living and extinct. My research on chimpanzee AST is made possible with the continued support of Chimbo, an NGO based in Boé, Guinea-Bissau.