首页> 外文期刊>American Journal of Physical Anthropology >Female Red Colobus Monkeys Maintain Their Densities Through Flexible Feeding Strategies in Logged Forests in Kibale National Park, Uganda
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Female Red Colobus Monkeys Maintain Their Densities Through Flexible Feeding Strategies in Logged Forests in Kibale National Park, Uganda

机译:乌干达基巴莱国家公园的原木森林中的雌性红疣猴通过灵活的采食策略维持其密度

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Behavioral flexibility allows primates to cope with environmental variability. Quantifying primate responses to human habitat modifications allows an effective means of assessing coping mechanisms. Within Kibale National Park, Uganda, logging led to reduced primate food availability that still exists almost 50 years after the harvest. Following the predictions of the ideal free distribution theory, primate densities are expected to decrease in areas of lower resource availability so that the resources available per individual are equivalent in logged and old-growth areas. However, counter to what would be predicted by the ideal free distribution theory, red colobus monkeys (Procolobus rufomitratus) occur at similar densities in logged and oldgrowth areas of Kibale. This suggests that either the ecological differences between the two areas are not sufficient to impact red colobus densities or that animals in logged areas are compensating to changes in resource availability by using different foraging strategies. To test between these hypotheses, we examined four groups of red colobus, two in logged and two in old-growth forests, and compared feeding behavior, feeding tree size, and tree productivity. Females in logged areas fed on resources from a greater number of plant species, fed on fewer resources from each species, and spent more time feeding than those in old-growth areas. By expanding their diet, females in logged areas effectively increased the resources available to them, which may contribute to their ability to maintain similar densities to females in old-growth areas. These findings have implications for an evolutionary understanding of how species deal with environmental change and considerations for conservation practices that determine what areas should be prioritized for protection. Am J Phys Anthropol 154:52–60, 2014.
机译:行为灵活性允许灵长类动物应对环境变化。量化灵长类动物对人类栖息地变化的反应,是评估应对机制的有效手段。在乌干达的基巴莱国家公园内,伐木导致灵长类动物的食物供应减少,收获后近50年仍然存在。根据理想的自由分配理论的预测,在资源利用率较低的地区,灵长类动物的密度预计会降低,因此在伐木区和旧区,每个人的可用资源均相等。然而,与理想的自由分布理论所预测的相反,红疣猴(Procolobus rufomitratus)以相同的密度出现在基巴莱的原木和老龄地区。这表明这两个地区之间的生态差异不足以影响红色疣猴的密度,或者采伐地区的动物正在通过使用不同的觅食策略来补偿资源可利用性的变化。为了检验这些假设,我们检查了四类红色疣猴,其中两个在伐木森林中,两个在旧森林中,并比较了采食行为,采食树的大小和树木的生产力。与旧种地区相比,伐木地区的雌性以大量植物物种的资源为食,每种物种以较少的资源为食,并且花费的时间更多。通过扩大饮食,伐木地区的雌性有效地增加了可供其使用的资源,这可能有助于她们维持与老龄地区的雌性相似的密度。这些发现对于进化理解物种如何应对环境变化以及对保护实践的考虑具有决定性意义,这些实践决定了应该优先保护哪些区域。 Am J Phys Anthropol 154:52-60,2014年。

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