
| Robert W. Sussman |
| Media Assistance:
Neil Schoenherr News Writer; Assoc. Record Editor nschoenherr@wustl.edu (314) 935-5235 |
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| Sussman |
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| Saving the lemur New satellite imaging research could save the lemur in Madagascar (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/11163.html) March 3, 2008 --
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| It's natural to be nice Survival of the fittest? Anthropologist suggests the nicest prevail not just the selfish (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/902.html) June 9, 2004 --
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| Early Humans Were Prey, Not Predators, Experts Say
National Geographic News online and 19 others March 8, 2006 -- News story looks at the debate over whether early humans were predators or prey. WUSTL anthropologist Robert Sussman is co-author of a book that presents a new theory that is part of a movement to debunk a long-running scientific bias that early humans were warlike. The researchers presented their theories in February at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in St. Louis. |
| Theory men are wired to kill straying mates is offensive and wrong
Wall Street Journal May 20, 2005 -- WSJ science writer Sharon Begley critiques U. Texas professor David Buss' new book in which he explains how men's minds got wired to kill mates who strayed. She says, as evolutionary theory, this is ludicrous. The claim that men are wired to kill their mate also flies in the face of fossil and primate data showing that early humans were prey, not predators, notes WUSTL anthropologist Robert Sussman, who is the co-author of Man the Hunted. |
In Costa Rica, he plans to develop a project, with bird and bat specialists, to study ecological interactions between frugivores at the La Selva Reserve. This reserve is operated by the Organization of Tropical Studies (OTS) -- a consortium of universities, including Washington University -- and is one of the best-studied tropical forest reserves in the world. He serves on the board of directors of OTS.
He recently began surveying forests of Guyana. With colleagues from Washington University, he hopes to develop a reserve similar to the one in Madagascar and to begin research in primate communities in Guyana.
His students have worked in many areas of the world and are not limited to areas in which he does research.
Sussman has published more than 100 articles in scholarly journals, including Science, and has written or edited seven books. His two most recent books are part of a three-volume reference-and-textbook set titled Primate Ecology and Social Structure (one on prosimians, the second on New World monkeys and the third on Old World monkeys and apes). After the third volume is completed, the trio will be published as a single volume on free-ranging primates.
He has received grants from the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, National Geographic Society, World Wildlife Fund and the Fulbright Scholar Program, and a number of other agencies.
In 2001 he was named a fellow of the American Association of the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the highest recognition the organization bestows. He was also elected a council delegate from the AAAS's Section on Anthropology.
Sussman served a four-year term as editor in chief of American Anthropologist, the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association. He prepared the journal's historic 100th anniversary issue in 1998, which focused on race and racism. He believes that anthropologists, as cross-cultural experts in human behavior and evolution, can play a major role in addressing current racial divisiveness.
Sussman earned bachelor's (1965) and master's (1967) degrees in anthropology from the University of California-Los Angeles and graduated with a Ph.D. from Duke University in 1972.
Courses
Primate Ecology and Behavior, Biological Basis of Human Behavior, Field Methodology, Behavioral Studies at the St. Louis Zoo, Selected Topics in Primatology
Selected Publications
Sussman, R.W., J. Cheverud, and T.Q. Bartlett
1995 Infant killing as an evolutionary strategy: reality or myth? Evolutionary Anthropology 3:149-151.
Sussman, R.W. and J. Phillips-Conroy
1995 A survey of the distribution and density of the primates in Guyana. International Journal of Primatology 16: 761-791.
Sussman, R.W., G.M. Green, and L.K. Sussman
1996 The use of satellite imagery and anthropology to assess the causes of deforestation in Madagascar. pp. 296-315, In L.E. Sponsel, T.N. Headland, and R.C. Bailey (eds), Tropical Deforestation: The Human Dimension. Columbia University Press, New York.
Norconk, M.A., R.W. Sussman, J. Phillips-Conroy
1996 Primates of Guyana shield forests. pp. 69-83. In M.A. Norconk, A.L. Rosenberger, and P. Garber (eds.). Adaptive Radiations of Neotropical Primates Plenum Press, New York.
Tattersall, I. and R.W. Sussman
1998 Little brown lemurs of northern Madagascar: phylogeny and ecological role in resource partitioning. Folia Primatologica 69: 379-388.
Sussman, R.W.
1997 The Biological Basis of Human Behavior. Simon and Schuster Custom Publishing, Nashville. (Editor)
1999 The myth of Man the Hunter, Man the Killer, and the evolution of human morality. Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science. 34: 453-471.
2000 Primate Ecology and Social Structure, Vol. 2: New World Monkeys. Pearson Custom Publishing, Boston, MA.
2000 Piltdown Man: The father of American field primatology. Pp. 85-103. In S.C. Strum and L.M. Fedigan (eds.) Primate Encounters: Models of Science, Gender and Society. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
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