Primatology Research Group, Behavioral Biology, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.
Conservation Ecology Program, King Mongkut's University of Technology, Thakham, Bangkhuntien, Thailand.
Am J Primatol. 2018 Nov;80(11):e22916. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22916. Epub 2018 Oct 11.
Bird egg predation is widespread in non-human primates. Although nest predation is often described as opportunistic, little is known about foraging strategies and nest detection in primates. Since it is the prevalent cause of nest failure in the tropics, birds select nest sites within specific microhabitats and use different nest types to increase nesting success. Identifying the nests targeted by the northern pigtailed macaques (Macaca leonina), an omnivorous cercopithecine species, and known nest predator, will shine light on nest foraging strategies in primates. The aim of this research was to reveal if nest predation is a selective or opportunistic feeding behavior. We studied, using artificial nests and camera traps, the influence of nest type (open-cup vs. cavity), microhabitat (i.e., understory density, canopy cover, canopy height, ground cover, and presence vs. absence of thorns and lianas), and nest height, on nest predation by a troop of northern pigtailed macaques in the Sakaerat Biosphere Reserve (Thailand), a degraded environment. In our study, macaque predation on artificial nests was high; out of the 200 nests that were set up, 112 were plundered by macaques. Although predation rates decreased with nest height, nest type, and microhabitat had no significant effect on predation by macaques. Nest detectability and accessibility did not affect predation rates. Macaques actively searched for nests in different microhabitats, suggesting that nest predation by this primate might be considered a selective feeding behavior in this degraded habitat. Consequently, nest predation by this primate might have important conservation implications on the population dynamics of forest-dwelling bird species. Behavior observation methods, such as instantaneous scan sampling, may underestimate nest predation by primates, a furtive and cryptic behavior.
鸟类偷蛋在非人类灵长类动物中很常见。虽然巢捕食通常被描述为机会主义行为,但人们对灵长类动物的觅食策略和巢探测知之甚少。由于它是热带地区巢失败的主要原因,鸟类会在特定的小生境中选择巢址,并使用不同的巢型来提高筑巢成功率。确定杂食性长尾猕猴(Macaca leonina)的目标巢,这种猕猴是已知的巢捕食者,将揭示灵长类动物的巢觅食策略。本研究旨在揭示巢捕食是否是一种选择性或机会性的觅食行为。我们使用人工巢和相机陷阱研究了巢型(敞口杯型与洞巢型)、微生境(即林下密度、冠层覆盖率、冠层高度、地面覆盖度、有无荆棘和藤本植物)和巢高度对一个长尾猕猴群在萨卡伊生物圈保护区(泰国)的巢捕食行为的影响,该保护区是一个退化的环境。在我们的研究中,猕猴对人工巢的捕食率很高;在设置的 200 个巢中,有 112 个被猕猴掠夺。尽管随着巢的高度增加,捕食率降低,但巢型和微生境对猕猴的捕食没有显著影响。巢的可探测性和可及性对捕食率没有影响。猕猴在不同的微生境中积极寻找巢,这表明这种灵长类动物的巢捕食可能被认为是在这个退化栖息地的一种选择性觅食行为。因此,这种灵长类动物的巢捕食可能对森林栖息鸟类的种群动态具有重要的保护意义。行为观察方法,如瞬时扫描采样,可能低估了灵长类动物的巢捕食行为,因为这种行为是隐蔽和隐秘的。