(Appendix 3) Hanya (2004) explains species as an omnivorous animal. But like their environmental climate, their diet is also periodic. From summer to autumn macaques depend mainly on fruits and insect foods. When winter comes, their meals mainly consist of flowers and honey. As cold snow and frost come down, macaques are forced to feed.
University of Pennsylvania psychologist Bob Sayforth and biologist Dorothy Cheney made a classic experiment about this problem. Soon after birth they switched between a pair of rhesus macaques and macaques, so that the parents of Japanese monkey raised rhesus macaques and rhesus monkeys kept Japanese macaques. This special kind of switcher is very interesting. Because the two primate species use the majority of the same sound for communication - ham, cry, cry, and cry. they are. For example, young rhesus monkeys tend to be disrespectful during a game, but Japanese monkeys tend to bark.
In monkeys such as rhesus monkeys, cynomolgus monkeys, pigtails, stumps, Japanese monkeys, B virus or Cercopithecine herpesvirus 1 is common. B virus can flow out into its saliva for life and all adult macaques should be considered a carrier. B virus may infect people through bites and scratches and may cause acute nervous system diseases and fatal encephalitis. There is a possibility of being seriously injured when stabbed by animals, and it may be exposed to zoonosis common diseases such as rabies. About 4.5 million people are stabbed in the United States every year by dogs, and it is estimated that about one fifth of them are in need of medical care. Children are at high risk of serious injury due to animal bite. If you are stabbed by an animal, please contact your health care provider or regional health department. They can help ensure proper rabies prevention after bites
The famous study of Japanese monkeys in 1953 gave us insight as to how tool manufacturers can eliminate infectious populations. The researchers noticed that a small monkey called Imo became fickle, and started washing sweet potatoes before eating sweet potatoes. Ten years later, other members of the group copied her and even newborns imitated her behavior. In another more viral example of potato innovation, she developed a way to sort the sand from the wheat by sinking the sand by placing the mixture in water, so that the floating wheat can be harvested. Macaque imitated her after seeing the possibility. Five years later, all the Japanese monkeys used a new method. This suggests that apes mimicry can trace back to at least 25 million years when monkey lineage is distinguished.