TY - JOUR
T1 - The (mis)use of the term ‘commensalism’ in primatology
AU - Maréchal , Laëtitia
AU - McKinney, Tracie
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Prof. Joanna Setchell for the opportunity and invitation to write this commentary, as well as for her valuable feedback on an earlier version of the commentary. We also thank Aimee Oxley, Dr. Giuseppe Donati, and Prof. Catherine Hill for organizing the workshop held at European Federation for Primatology and the Primate Society for Great Britain conference in Oxford, 2019, and the discussants and participants for fruitful conversation. Finally, we would like to thank the editor and reviewer for their helpful comments.
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/2/8
Y1 - 2020/2/8
N2 - This commentary arose from a workshop entitled ‘What works, and what doesn’t work? The challenge of creating effective applied conservation research in human-modified habitats’, held during the joint meeting of the European Federation for Primatology and the Primate Society for Great Britain in Oxford, 2019. One discussion point highlighted the different use of terminology between disciplines as a challenge for effective multidisciplinary conservation research. Growing number of publications have drawn attention to the misuse of the terms such as human-wildlife conflict (Marshall et al. 2007, Peterson et al. 2010, Davidar 2018), crop-raiding (Hill 2017), or ecotourism (McKinney 2017). Here we widen this conversation by reflecting on an additional term regularly used in primatology: commensalism. Here, we will give the different definitions of the term ‘commensal’ used across disciplines and the implications of its misuse. We will then discuss whether this term can be used to categorise human-nonhuman primate (afterward NHP) relationships, and conclude by proposing alternative terminology.
AB - This commentary arose from a workshop entitled ‘What works, and what doesn’t work? The challenge of creating effective applied conservation research in human-modified habitats’, held during the joint meeting of the European Federation for Primatology and the Primate Society for Great Britain in Oxford, 2019. One discussion point highlighted the different use of terminology between disciplines as a challenge for effective multidisciplinary conservation research. Growing number of publications have drawn attention to the misuse of the terms such as human-wildlife conflict (Marshall et al. 2007, Peterson et al. 2010, Davidar 2018), crop-raiding (Hill 2017), or ecotourism (McKinney 2017). Here we widen this conversation by reflecting on an additional term regularly used in primatology: commensalism. Here, we will give the different definitions of the term ‘commensal’ used across disciplines and the implications of its misuse. We will then discuss whether this term can be used to categorise human-nonhuman primate (afterward NHP) relationships, and conclude by proposing alternative terminology.
U2 - 10.1007/s10764-020-00137-8
DO - 10.1007/s10764-020-00137-8
M3 - Comment/debate
SN - 0164-0291
VL - 41
JO - International Journal of Primatology
JF - International Journal of Primatology
IS - 1
ER -