Wagner Katherine E, Ross Stephen R
Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, Illinois 60614, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2008 Jul;70(7):703-6. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20545.
In response to work demonstrating a negative correlation between human staff activity and parturition in laboratory-managed primates, this study examined the distribution of 231 captive chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) births that occurred in accredited American zoological institutions by the day of the week on which the birth was discovered. We hypothesized that if chimpanzee parturition patterns displayed sensitivity to human presence, then fewer births per day would be reported during the weekend period, when the visitor density was high, as compared with the lower density working week. Analyses indicated that chimpanzee births were randomly distributed throughout the week. In the context of the questionable sensitivity of primate parturition to external influence, results suggest that variations in human presence do not affect the fine-level timing of birth in chimpanzees managed in a zoological setting.
针对有关人类工作人员活动与实验室管理的灵长类动物分娩之间存在负相关的研究,本研究调查了美国经认可的动物园机构中231例圈养黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)分娩的分布情况,按发现分娩当天是星期几来统计。我们假设,如果黑猩猩的分娩模式对人类在场表现出敏感性,那么与工作日较低的游客密度相比,在游客密度高的周末期间,每天报告的分娩数量会更少。分析表明,黑猩猩的分娩在一周内随机分布。鉴于灵长类动物分娩对外部影响的敏感性存疑,研究结果表明,人类在场情况的变化不会影响动物园环境中管理的黑猩猩分娩的精确时间。