Professor Alison Behie
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Position: Professor
School and/or Centres: Biological Anthropology
Position: Head of School
School and/or Centres: School of Archaeology and Anthropology
Email: alison.behie@anu.edu.au
Phone: 612 53662
Location: Room 245, Upper Floor, Banks Building (#44), Linnaeus Way
Qualification:
B.Sc., M.A., Ph.D, FHEAResearcher profile: https://researchportalplus.anu.edu.au/en/persons/alison-behie
In 2010, Alison received a Ph.D from The University of Calgary in Anthropology (with a primatology specialization). Her dissertation work examined the effects of a major hurricane on a howler monkey population in Southern Belize, specifically examining the roles of food supply, nutrition, stress hormones and parasitism in the recovery of this population. From 2009 - 2011, Alison lectured in both the Department of Anthropology at The University of Calgary and The Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Mount Royal University in Calgary. Currently, she is a lecturer and Head of Discipline in Biological Anthropology in the School of Archaeology and Anthropology at The Australian National University.
Primate behaviour and conservation; impact of nutrition on stress hormones and parasitism in non-human primates; effect of habitat disturbance, including environmental disasters on humans and non-human primates
Researcher's projects
The effect of environmental disasters on non-human primates: Alison continues to monitor the long-term recovery of a howler monkey population in Southern Belize to Hurricane Iris, which struck in 2001. She is also using this information to investigate post-disturbance community ecology including new mechanisms of parasite exposure related to changes in forest composition.
Socioecology of silvered langurs and crested yellow-cheeked gibbons in Cambodia: Working in conjunction with Conservation International, Alison is working on research projects investigating behaviour, nutrition, and habitat use of these two endangered primate species in Northeastern Cambodia. This is also the site where Alison runs an annual field school in Primate Behaviour and Ecology (BIAN 3018/6018).
Behaviour and Conservation of Cat Ba langurs in Vietnam: With less than 70 animals left in the world, Alison is working with the Cat Ba Langur Conservation Project and Fauna&Flora International, to investigate the population structure and viability of this critically endangered primate.
Impacts of prenatal stress on reproduction and childhood development: Alison is investigating how stress expreienced in utero and in early childhood impacts bith condition and development of children into adolescence and adulthood.
Available student projects
1) Possible Honours/MBIAN projects can be supervised on:
Numerous aspects of primate behaviour, conservation and ecology using the literature, data collected on captive primates or existing data on howler monkeys
Effects of environmental disasters on humans or non-human primates
2) Possible MBIAN/PhD projects can be supervised as part of the following long term research projects:
The behavioural ecology of endangered primates in northeastern Cambodia
The behaviour, physiology and conservation of the Cat Ba Langur
The effects of prenatal stress and/or environmental disasters on human life history traits
Please contact alison.behie@anu.edu.au for information regarding possible honour's MA or PhD projects
Current student projects
PhD Students:
Kirrily Apthorp: Habitat quality of three critically endangred primate species in Vietnam
Rebecca Hendershott: Socioecology of the Cat Ba Langur (Trachypithecus poliocephalus) in Vietnam:Implications for Conservation Planning
Abu Kibria: Ecosystem service valuation of Veun Sai Siem Pang Conservation Area, Cambodia
Nicky Kim-McCormack:Investigating the effect of free choice digital activities on orangutan behaviour
Lauren McFarlane: The impacts of prenatal and early life stress on the biological, cognitive and social outcomes of Indigenous Australian children from an evolutionary perspective
Amy King: Cogntion and Social transmission in gibbons
Megan O'Donnell: The impact of bush fires on life history traits of Australian populations: The effects of pre-natal and early childhood stress
Alannah Pearson: Inside and Out: Using virtual imaging to investigate the evolution of cranial bones and brain lobes in fossil and living primates.
Kayla Ruskin: Feeding ecology and nutrition of the critically endangered Cat Ba Langur (Trachypithecus poliocephalus)
Honours Students:
Sofie Semmler: Using metabolomics to assess the nutritional quality of the food supply of colobus monkeys in Kibale National Park, Uganda.
Past student projects
Masters Students:
2015 Lauren McFarlane. Impact of the Queensland Flood on birth outcomes and reproduction
2015 Joanna Blake. Review of Locomotor Research in the Callitrichidae and an Exploratory Study of Individual Locomotor Variation in Saguinus Oedipus
2014 Kirrily Apthorp. Making sense of Maba man.
2013 Britta Nelson. Sleeping and calling tree use by Northern buff-cheeked gibbons in Cambodia.
2012 Megan O'Donnell. The impact of pre-natal stress on reproductive outcomes following the 2009 Black Saturday bushfires
2012 Josh Christie. Behavioural flexibility in captive ring tailed lemurs
Honours Students:
2015 Olivia Morley. Key resource use of Northern yellow-cheeked crested Gibbon (Nomascus annamensis)
2015 Cynthia Parayiwa. The impact of maternal exposure to environmental disasters on birth outcomes following Cyclone Yasi (2011) in Queensland, Australia
2015 Jessica Williams. Environmental, anthropogenic and energetic predictors of the likelihood of Northern buff-cheeked crested gibbons (Nomascus annamensis) calling in Veun-Sai Siem Pang Conservation Area, Cambodia
2015 Madelaine Winkler (Co-supervised with Dr Geoff Kushnick). Pathogen Pressure and Consanguineous Marriage: the Case of Impal Marriage among the Karo Batak from North Sumatra
2015 Hayley Roberts. Reproductive Characteristics of Captive Langurs and Gibbons: Life History and Reproductive Senescence
2014 Jasmine Soukieh. Human brain development in the context of undernutrition: cognitive implications
2013 Amy King. A new approach to the social brain hypothesis
2013 Kayla Ruskin. Using geometric frameworks to understand howler monkey food selection following a major hurricane