Mendes Francisco Dyonísio C, Cardoso Raphael Moura, Ottoni Eduardo B, Izar Patrícia, Villar Daniell Nunes A, Marquezan Rogério F
Departamento de Processos Psicológicos Básicos, Universidade de Brasília, Brasília, Brazil; Departamento de Psicologia, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Goiás, Goiânia, Brazil.
Am J Primatol. 2015 May;77(5):535-46. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22373. Epub 2015 Feb 12.
Cracking nuts with tools is a behavior documented in a small number of populations of tufted capuchins, mainly in semi-arid Caatinga and Caatinga-Cerrado transitional environments of northeastern Brazil. Only one of these populations inhabits the less arid Cerrado in Central Brazil, where environments are composed of a heterogeneous mosaic of fields, savannas and forest formations. We conducted surveys in 10 of 20 localities where nutcracking by capuchins was reported by the local inhabitants in the Cerrrado of Northern Goiás and Tocantins. Our purpose was to evaluate nutcracking sites (anvils and associated hammers and nuts) based on indirect evidence of extensive pounding of nuts and seeds. Nutcracking was confirmed at all 10 surveyed localities. A total of 270 sites were identified. Surveyed localities included areas that were ecologically similar to those where capuchins crack nuts in Caatinga, as well as less arid localities with more typical Cerrado habitat. Anvils and hammers were made of materials including quartz, limestone, sandstone and wood, and displayed a wider range of sizes (i.e., 60-3,750 g for hammers' weight) than reported at previously studied localities. Nuts of seven genera were found in association with anvils and hammers. We conclude that nutcracking by capuchins are not restricted to arid environments and argue that the occurrence and diversity of nutcracking tool sites result from complex interactions of environmental variables (e.g., availability of food and mineral resources, density of canopy cover) and social variables (e.g., spatial cohesiveness and tolerance among group members) that need to be examined through long-term research of habituated groups. Localities in the Cerrado of Northern Goiás and Tocantins vary considerable in the ecological conditions faced by wild groups, and therefore offer the opportunity to examine these interactions.
使用工具砸开坚果是一种在少数簇绒卷尾猴群体中被记录下来的行为,主要出现在巴西东北部半干旱的卡廷加以及卡廷加-塞拉多过渡环境中。这些群体中只有一个栖息在巴西中部较为湿润的塞拉多地区,那里的环境由田野、稀树草原和森林组成的异质镶嵌体构成。我们在戈亚斯州北部和托坎廷斯州塞拉多地区的20个当地居民报告有卷尾猴砸坚果行为的地点中选取了10个进行调查。我们的目的是根据坚果和种子被大量敲击的间接证据来评估砸坚果的地点(砧石以及相关的锤子和坚果)。在所有10个被调查的地点都证实了有砸坚果行为。总共识别出了270个地点。被调查的地点包括生态上与卡廷加地区卷尾猴砸坚果的地点相似的区域,以及具有更典型塞拉多栖息地的较湿润地区。砧石和锤子由石英、石灰石、砂岩和木材等材料制成,并且与之前研究的地点相比,它们的尺寸范围更广(即锤子重量为60 - 3750克)。与砧石和锤子相关联发现了七个属的坚果。我们得出结论,卷尾猴砸坚果的行为并不局限于干旱环境,并认为砸坚果工具地点的出现和多样性是环境变量(如食物和矿产资源的可获得性、树冠覆盖密度)和社会变量(如群体成员之间的空间凝聚力和容忍度)复杂相互作用的结果,这些需要通过对习惯化群体的长期研究来考察。戈亚斯州北部和托坎廷斯州塞拉多地区的地点在野生群体所面临的生态条件方面有很大差异,因此提供了研究这些相互作用的机会。