首页> 外文期刊>American Journal of Physical Anthropology >Foraging and Ranging Behavior During a Fallback Episode: Hylobates albibarbis and Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii Compared
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Foraging and Ranging Behavior During a Fallback Episode: Hylobates albibarbis and Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii Compared

机译:后备情节中的觅食和测距行为:刺果白粉病和Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii的比较

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摘要

Periodic episodes of food scarcity may highlight the adaptive value of certain anatomical traits, particularly those that facilitate the acquisition and digestion of exigent fallback foods. To better understand the selective pressures that favored the distinctive dental and locomotor morphologies of gibbons and orangutans, we examined the foraging and ranging behavior of sympatric Hylobates albibarbis and Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii during an episode of low fruit availability at Tuanan, Kalimantan Tengah, Indonesia. We found that Hylobates ranged 0.5 km day(-1) or 33% farther than did Pongo, but the overall daily ranging of both species did not vary as fruit availability decreased by as much as 50%. Among gibbons, we observed dietary switching to fallback foods; in particular, there was a progressively greater reliance on figs, liana products, and unripe fruit. Orangutans relied heavily on unripe fruit and fracture-resistant bark and pith tissues. Despite these divergent fallback patterns, the stiffness of fruit mesocarp consumed by Hylobates and Pongo did not differ. We discuss canine and molar functional morphology with respect to dietary mechanics. Next, to contextualize these results, we discuss our findings with respect to forest structure. The rain forests of Southeast Asia have been described as having open, discontinuous canopies. Such a structure may inform our understanding of the ranging behavior and distinctive locomotion of apes in the region, namely richochetal brachiation and quadrumanous clambering. Our approach of integrating behavioral ecology with physical measures of food may be a powerful tool for understanding the functional adaptations of primates. Am J Phys Anthropol 140:716-726, 2009.
机译:食物的周期性发作可能会突出某些解剖学特征的适应性价值,尤其是那些有助于获取和消化紧急后备食物的解剖学特征。为了更好地了解有利于长臂猿和猩猩独特的牙齿和运动形态的选择性压力,我们在印度尼西亚加里曼丹登加(Tuanah)的图安(Tuanan)出现水果供应不足的时期,研究了同胞Hylobates albibarbis和Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii的觅食和游走行为。我们发现,刺蛇的日射程比庞戈高0.5 km(-1)或33%,但由于果实的可利用性下降了50%之多,这两个物种的总日射程没有变化。在长臂猿中,我们观察到饮食向后备食物转变。特别是,人们越来越依赖无花果,藤本植物产品和未成熟的水果。猩猩严重依赖未成熟的水果和抗断裂的树皮和髓组织。尽管存在这些不同的后备模式,但是Hylobates和Pongo所消耗的果皮的硬度没有变化。我们讨论有关饮食力学的犬齿和磨牙功能形态。接下来,为背景介绍这些结果,我们讨论了有关森林结构的发现。东南亚的雨林被描述为具有开放的,不连续的顶篷。这样的结构可能有助于我们了解该地区猿的测距行为和独特的运动,即棘足编织和四肢攀爬。我们将行为生态学与食物的物理测量相结合的方法可能是了解灵长类动物功能适应的有力工具。 Am J Phys Anthropol 140:716-726,2009年。

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