Hsu Minna J, Kao Chien-Ching, Agoramoorthy Govindasamy
Department of Biological Sciences, National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
Am J Primatol. 2009 Mar;71(3):214-22. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20638.
Ecotourism involving feeding wildlife has raised public attention and is a controversial issue, especially concerning nonhuman primates. Between July 2002 and April 2005, the behavior of monkeys and tourists was collected through scan samplings, focal samplings and behavior samplings at the Shou-Shan Nature Park located in Taiwan's second largest city--Kaohsiung. In addition, the number of tourists and monkeys was counted in different hours and places within the park. Four hundred visitors were interviewed using a questionnaire to gather data on sex, age, purpose and frequency of visit to the park. The number of tourists was significantly higher during weekends than in weekdays in all locations. Humans dominated in the initiation of interspecies interactions--the overall ratio of human-initiated and monkey-initiated interactions was 2.44:1. Human-monkey conflicts accounted for only 16.4% of the total interactions (n=2,166), and adult human males and adult male macaques participated in higher rates than other age/sex groups in these conflicts. Visitors showed more affiliative behavior (15.9%) than agonistic behavior (8%) toward the macaques. In response to visitors' threat or attack, the Formosan macaques mostly showed submissive behavior with bared teeth, squealed or ran away to avoid confrontation (69.1%)--only few responded with counteraggression (18.7%). This study for the first time provided evidence that food provisioning increased both the frequency and duration of aggression among Formosan macaques (P<0.001). During food provisioning, the average frequency and the duration of agonistic events of macaques were more than 4 times higher compared with those without food provisioning. The average frequency of food provision by tourists was 0.73 times/hr--more than twice the incident that monkeys grabbed the food from tourists (0.34 times/hr). If people refrain from feeding monkeys and destroying the city park's natural vegetation, monkeys can be used to educate public about nature conservation in an urban setting.
涉及投喂野生动物的生态旅游已引起公众关注,且是一个颇具争议的问题,尤其是涉及非人灵长类动物时。2002年7月至2005年4月期间,通过扫描取样、焦点取样和行为取样,在位于台湾第二大城市高雄的寿山自然公园收集了猴子和游客的行为数据。此外,还统计了公园内不同时段和地点的游客及猴子数量。使用问卷对400名游客进行了访谈,以收集有关性别、年龄、游览公园的目的和频率的数据。在所有地点,周末的游客数量均显著高于工作日。在种间互动的发起方面人类占主导地位——人类发起与猴子发起的互动的总体比例为2.44:1。人类与猴子的冲突仅占总互动的16.4%(n = 2166),在这些冲突中,成年男性人类和成年雄性猕猴的参与率高于其他年龄/性别组。游客对猕猴表现出的亲和行为(15.9%)多于攻击行为(8%)。针对游客的威胁或攻击,台湾猕猴大多表现出露齿、尖叫或逃跑以避免对抗的顺从行为(69.1%)——只有少数做出反击(18.7%)。本研究首次提供证据表明,投喂食物增加了台湾猕猴之间攻击行为的频率和持续时间(P < 0.001)。在投喂食物期间,猕猴攻击事件的平均频率和持续时间比未投喂食物时高出4倍多。游客投喂食物的平均频率为每小时0.73次——是猴子从游客手中抢夺食物事件(每小时0.34次)的两倍多。如果人们避免投喂猴子并破坏城市公园的自然植被,猴子可用于在城市环境中对公众进行自然保护教育。