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Demographic, behavioral, and ecological data from a long-term field study of wild baboons in Amboseli, Kenya.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Southworth, CA; Winans, JC; Gordon, JB; Learn, NH; Wilber, WA; Andreadis, C; Andreasen, G; Arandjelovic, M; Campbell, CR; Chege, MN; Cromer, CM ...
Published in: bioRxiv
October 3, 2025

Long-term data sets on individually recognized animals and their environments are critical to understanding animal behavior, evolution, and ecology. However, they are resource- and time-intensive and seldom made publicly available. The Amboseli Baboon Research Project (ABRP) is one of the longest-running studies of a wild mammal population in the world and has collected extensive data on the baboon population of the Amboseli ecosystem in Kenya since 1971. Here, we describe four ABRP data sets newly available to the evolutionary biology, behavioral ecology, and primatology communities: (1) the sizes and demographic compositions of 21 social groups from 1971-2023; (2) the activity budgets of adult females and immatures from 1984-2023; (3) behavioral data on diet for adult females and immatures from 1984-2023; and (4) weather data, including precipitation from 1976-2023 and temperature from 1976-2022. Data are aggregated annually and monthly to enable cross-data set analyses. These data offer a rare longitudinal perspective on behavioral and ecological change in a wild mammal population.

Duke Scholars

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

October 3, 2025

Location

United States
 

Citation

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Southworth, C. A., Winans, J. C., Gordon, J. B., Learn, N. H., Wilber, W. A., Andreadis, C., … Tung, J. (2025). Demographic, behavioral, and ecological data from a long-term field study of wild baboons in Amboseli, Kenya. BioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.10.03.680086
Southworth, Chelsea A., Jack C. Winans, Jacob B. Gordon, Niki H. Learn, William A. Wilber, Catherine Andreadis, Gretchen Andreasen, et al. “Demographic, behavioral, and ecological data from a long-term field study of wild baboons in Amboseli, Kenya.BioRxiv, October 3, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.10.03.680086.
Southworth CA, Winans JC, Gordon JB, Learn NH, Wilber WA, Andreadis C, et al. Demographic, behavioral, and ecological data from a long-term field study of wild baboons in Amboseli, Kenya. bioRxiv. 2025 Oct 3;
Southworth, Chelsea A., et al. “Demographic, behavioral, and ecological data from a long-term field study of wild baboons in Amboseli, Kenya.BioRxiv, Oct. 2025. Pubmed, doi:10.1101/2025.10.03.680086.
Southworth CA, Winans JC, Gordon JB, Learn NH, Wilber WA, Andreadis C, Andreasen G, Arandjelovic M, Campbell CR, Chege MN, Creighton MJA, Cromer CM, Debray R, Dickson CC, Ferretti P, George EM, Gesquiere LR, He S, Hey L, Jefferson EE, Kulahci IG, Lerch BA, Nonnamaker L, Rivas-González I, Tuliozi B, Webb SE, Alberts SC, Archie EA, Tung J. Demographic, behavioral, and ecological data from a long-term field study of wild baboons in Amboseli, Kenya. bioRxiv. 2025 Oct 3;

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

October 3, 2025

Location

United States