Abteilung Soziobiologie/Anthropologie - Louise Peckre

Louise Peckre

Education

  • 2013 – 2015 - Master’s degree in fundamental and comparative Ethology
    Paris XIII University, France
  • 2010 – 2015 - Five years engineering programme in biological, agricultural, and environmental fields
    Higher Agricultural Institute (ISA), Lille, France & Universidade Federal Rural da Amazonia, Belém, Brazil (one semester)
  • 2008 – 2010 - Two years program preparing for a competitive entrance examination to veterinary, agricultural, chemistry and geology schools (prépa BCPST)
    Lycée Saint-Louis, Paris, France

Research Experience

  • Doctoral position – March 2017 - February 2020 – Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) funding
  • Pre-Doctoral position – November 2015 - February 2017 – Grant proposal redaction
    DeutschesPrimatenzentrum, Göttingen, Germany
    “Communicative complexity in primates: sociality and multimodal communication in two species of lemurs”
    12 months field work in Madagascar
    Supervision: Prof. Peter Kappeler & Dr.Claudia Fichtel
  • Research Assistant – August - September 2015
  • M. Sc. Trainee – January - June 2015
    Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique(CNRS)
    Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle (MNHN) Paris, France
    “Evolution of grasping abilities in strepsirrhines”
    Supervision: Dr. Pouydebat E. & Dr. Fabre A.C.
  • M. Sc. Trainee – April - Mai 2014
    Laboratoire Ethology, Cognition, Development (LECD) Nanterre, France “Age-related variations in intra-sexual interactions in the Black Redstart Phoenicurusochruros” Supervision: Dr.Draganoiu T. & Huetdes Aunay G.
  • Research Field-Assistant – March 2013
    Fazenda Marupiara, Paragominas, Brazil
  • B. SC. Trainee – July - August 2012
    University of California, Davis, USA

Publikationen

Peckre L.R.*, Lowie A.*, Brewer D., Ehmke E., Welser K., Shaw E., Wall C.E., Pouydebat E. & Fabre A. C. (2019) Food mobility and the evolution of grasping behavior: a case study in strepsirrhine primates. Journal of Experimental Biology. doi: 10.1242/jeb.207688

Buil J.M.M.*, Peckre L.R.*, Dörge M., Fichtel C., Kappeler P.M. & Scherberger H. (2019) Remotely releasable collar mechanism for medium-sized mammals: an affordable technology to avoid multiple captures. Wildlife Biology. doi: 10.2981/wlb.00581

Peckre L.*, Fabre A. C.*, Hambuckers J., Wall C. E., Socias Martínez L., Pouydebat E. (2019) Food properties influence grasping strategies in strepsirrhines. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (special issue "What an interdisciplinary approach can tell us about the evolution of grasping behaviour and manipulation"). doi: 10.1093/biolinnean/bly215

Peckre L., Kappeler P. & Fichtel C. (2018) Clarifying and expanding the social complexity hypothesis for communicative complexity. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology (special issue "Social complexity: patterns, processes, and evolution"). doi: 10.1007/s00265-018-2605-4

Fabre A. C.*, Peckre L.*, Pouydebat E., Wall C. E. (2018) Does the shape of the forelimb long bones covary with grasping behaviour in strepsirrhine primates? Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (special issue "What an interdisciplinary approach can tell us about the evolution of grasping behaviour and manipulation"). doi: 10.1093/biolinnean/bly188

Peckre L., Defolie C., Kappeler P. & Fichtel C. (2018) Potential self‑medication using millipede secretions in red‑fronted lemurs: combining anointment and ingestion for a joint action against gastrointestinal parasites? Primates. doi: 10.1007/s1032

Peckre L.*, Fabre A. C.*, Wall C. E., Brewer D., Ehmke E., Haring D., Shaw E., Welser K. & Pouydebat E. (2016) Holding-on: co-evolution between infant carrying and grasping behaviour in strepsirrhines. Scientific reports. doi: 10.1038/srep37729