Primatology is represented on the World Wide Web (WWW or Web) with more than 500 pages of information, located at 200 Web sites. These pages range from simple fact sheets about primates to sophisticated on-line stereotaxic brain atlases. Veterinarians, biomedical research personnel, institutional animal care and use committee (IACUC) members, and others concerned with animal health can potentially find useful information about nonhuman primates using Internet resources; however, coverage is not consistent. Although considerable information can be found regarding the herpes B virus, for example, very little Web information is available on nonhuman primate anatomy and physiology. Like other disciplines, primatology is not fully represented by available on-line resources; and issues of source reliability, currency, and structure will continue to make the Internet a less than complete information resource. To put things in perspective, none of the major scientific primate journals are currently available through the Internet. Although few of the 80 primate-related newsletters have full text representation and fewer still (like Laboratory Primate Newsletter) include back issues, the tide is turning. PRIMATES, the outstanding bibliographic database of the Primate Information Center at the University of Washington, Seattle (PIC), can now be purchased only on an annual subscription basis for mounting on one's personal computer. However, plans are in development to make it searchable on the Web (Pritchard 1997). The International Directory of Primatology, published at the Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (WRPRC), is being converted for Internet access. Although issues of cost recovery have slowed the availability of essen-
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