Department of Zoology, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701 Cape Town, South Africa.
Am J Primatol. 2010 Feb;72(2):104-12. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20759.
We examined the effects of extreme seasonality on the activity budget and diet of wild chacma baboons with access to a high-quality, human-derived food source. The Cape Peninsula of South Africa is unusual among nonhuman primate habitats due to its seasonal extremes in day length and climate. Winter days are markedly shorter and colder than summer days but have higher rainfall and higher primary production of annually flowering plants. This combination of fewer daylight hours but higher rainfall is substantially different from the ecological constraints faced by both equatorial baboon populations and those living in temperate climates with summer rainfall. We sought to understand how these seasonal differences affect time budgets of food-enhanced troops in comparison to both other food-enhanced troops and wild foraging troops at similar latitudes. Our results revealed significant seasonal differences in activity budget and diet, a finding that contrasts with other baboon populations with access to high-return anthropogenic foods. Similar to nonprovisioned troops at similar latitudes, troop members spent more time feeding, socializing, and traveling during the long summer days compared to the short winter days, and proportionately more time feeding and less time resting in summer compared to winter. Summer diets consisted mainly of fynbos and nonindigenous foods, whereas winter diets were dominated by annually flowering plants (mainly grasses) and ostrich pellets raided from a nearby ostrich farm. In this case, food enhancement may have effectively exaggerated seasonal differences in activity budgets by providing access to a high-return food (ostrich pellets) that was spatially and temporally coincident with abundant winter fallback foods (grasses). The frequent use of both alien vegetation and high-return, human-derived foods highlights the dietary flexibility of baboons as a key element of their overall success in rapidly transforming environments such as the South African Cape Peninsula.
我们研究了季节性极端变化对有机会获取高质量人类食物源的野生海角山魈活动量和饮食的影响。南非开普半岛的非人类灵长类动物栖息地不同寻常,因为其日长和气候季节性极端变化明显。冬季白天明显比夏季短且冷,但降雨量较高,每年开花植物的初级生产力也较高。这种光照时间较少但降雨量较高的组合与赤道山魈种群以及在夏季降雨的温带气候中生活的山魈种群所面临的生态限制有很大不同。我们试图了解这些季节性差异如何影响食物增强型群体的时间分配,与其他食物增强型群体以及在类似纬度的野生觅食群体进行比较。我们的研究结果表明,活动量和饮食存在显著的季节性差异,这一发现与其他有机会获取高回报人为食物的山魈种群形成对比。与类似纬度的无供应群体相似,夏季的长昼期间,群体成员比冬季的短昼期间更多地用于觅食、社交和移动,而在夏季,用于觅食的时间相对较多,用于休息的时间相对较少。夏季饮食主要由 fynbos 和非本土食物组成,而冬季饮食主要由一年生开花植物(主要是草)和从附近鸵鸟农场偷来的鸵鸟丸组成。在这种情况下,食物增强可能通过提供与丰富的冬季替代食物(草)在空间和时间上一致的高回报食物(鸵鸟丸),有效地夸大了活动量预算的季节性差异。经常使用外来植被和高回报的人类食物突出了山魈的饮食灵活性,这是它们在快速变化的环境中取得整体成功的关键因素,例如南非开普半岛。