522 DISEASE IN WILD MAMMALS AND BIRDS 
perature of a monkey, the kind and the time of day are 
necessary adjuncts. Reference to forty-eight hour charts 
which are used for the illustration of normal records, and 
for contrast with tuberculin reactions later, will convey to 
the reader a better idea of the normal daily rhythm 
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Chart A. ORANG UTAN (Simia satyrus). Non-tuberoulous at death. 
of the simian heat regulating system than would 
verbal description. 
The anthropoid apes (Curves A and B) have on the 
whole a mean temperature nearer the human being than 
do the lower monkeys, but they too present daily variables 
far greater than man. The high point of their curve, at 
three PM., is in the neighborhood of 100° F. the lower 
Note. — In the temperature charts degrees indicated by circles and con- 
nected by dashes are from records made after diagnostic tests by inject- 
ing tuberculin. 
