Ross S R, Holmes A N, Lonsdorf E V
Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, Illinois 60614, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2009 Jun;71(6):458-65. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20675.
Although there are published reports of wild chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans hunting and consuming vertebrate prey, data pertaining to captive apes remain sparse. In this survey-based study, we evaluate the prevalence and nature of interactions between captive great apes and various indigenous wildlife species that range into their enclosures in North America. Our hypotheses were threefold: (a) facilities housing chimpanzees will report the most frequent and most aggressive interactions with local wildlife; (b) facilities housing orangutans and bonobos will report intermediate frequencies of these interactions with low levels of aggression and killing; and (c) facilities housing gorillas will report the lowest frequency of interactions and no reports of killing local wildlife. Chimpanzees and bonobos demonstrated the most aggressive behavior toward wildlife, which matched our predictions for chimpanzees, but not bonobos. This fits well with expectations for chimpanzees based on their natural history of hunting and consuming prey in wild settings, and also supports new field data on bonobos. Captive gorillas and orangutans were reported to be much less likely to chase, catch and kill wildlife than chimpanzees and bonobos. Gorillas were the least likely to engage in aggressive interactions with local wildlife, matching our predictions based on natural history. However unlike wild gorillas, captive gorillas were reported to kill (and in one case, eat) local wildlife. These results suggest that some behavioral patterns seen in captive groups of apes may be useful for modeling corresponding activities in the wild that may not be as easily observed and quantified. Furthermore, the data highlight the potential for disease transmission in some captive settings, and we outline the associated implications for ape health and safety.
尽管有关于野生黑猩猩、倭黑猩猩和猩猩捕猎并食用脊椎动物猎物的报道,但有关圈养猿类的数据仍然稀少。在这项基于调查的研究中,我们评估了圈养的大型猿类与进入其北美圈地的各种本土野生动物物种之间互动的发生率和性质。我们的假设有三点:(a) 饲养黑猩猩的设施将报告与当地野生动物最频繁、最具攻击性的互动;(b) 饲养猩猩和倭黑猩猩的设施将报告这些互动的中等频率,攻击性和杀戮水平较低;(c) 饲养大猩猩的设施将报告互动频率最低,且没有关于捕杀当地野生动物的报告。黑猩猩和倭黑猩猩对野生动物表现出最具攻击性的行为,这与我们对黑猩猩的预测相符,但与倭黑猩猩不符。这与基于黑猩猩在野外捕猎和食用猎物的自然历史对它们的预期非常吻合,也支持了关于倭黑猩猩的新野外数据。据报道,圈养的大猩猩和猩猩比黑猩猩和倭黑猩猩追逐、捕捉和杀死野生动物的可能性要小得多。大猩猩与当地野生动物进行攻击性互动的可能性最小,这与我们基于自然历史的预测相符。然而,与野生大猩猩不同的是,据报道圈养的大猩猩会杀死(在一个案例中还吃掉)当地野生动物。这些结果表明,在圈养猿类群体中观察到的一些行为模式可能有助于模拟在野外可能不容易观察和量化的相应活动。此外,数据凸显了在一些圈养环境中疾病传播的可能性,我们概述了对猿类健康和安全的相关影响。