Oates John F, Whitesides George H
Department of Anthropology, Hunter College and the Graduate School, CUNY, New York.
Department of Biology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida.
Am J Primatol. 1990;21(2):129-146. doi: 10.1002/ajp.1350210206.
Close association between olive colobus (Procolous verus) and other monkeys (especially Cercopithecus species) has been observed throughout the range of P. verus in the forest zone of West Africa. To investigate the basis of this association, we made new observations in Sierra Leone, concentrated at Tiwai Island. We obtained data on the association patterns of monkeys over a large area of the island from line-transect samples, and studied association behavior via long-term observational sampling of habituated groups of olive colobus and Diana monkeys (C. diana). During transect sampling, olive colobus always were seen less than 50 m from monkeys of other species, especially Cercopithecus. In studies of habituated groups, we found that one groups of olive colobus associated closely with a larger groups of Diana monkeys for more than 3 years. Members of the two groups were within 50 m of each other on over 80% of scan samples; the two groups shared the same range, but foraged in different parts of the canopy and had little dietary overlap; association was maintained by the behavior of the colobus. The olive colobus was the only Tiwai monkey species seen less than 50 m from members of a secon Diana study group more frequently than expected, although in this case the two species were associated during less than 12% of samples. In both cases, we detected month-to-month variation in association frequency. We suggest that olive colobus has a strong tendency to associate with other monkeys as part of an evolved strategy; that observed association patterns depend on the ranging habits and group dispersion patterns of the other species in the area; and that this strategy evolved because it reduces predation risk for a small-bodied monkey that forages in small, dispersed groups.
在西非森林地带的绿疣猴(Procolobus verus)分布范围内,人们观察到绿疣猴与其他猴子(尤其是猕猴属物种)之间存在密切关联。为了探究这种关联的基础,我们在塞拉利昂进行了新的观察,重点集中在蒂瓦伊岛。我们通过线状样带抽样获取了该岛大片区域内猴子的关联模式数据,并通过对习惯化的绿疣猴群和戴安娜猴(C. diana)群进行长期观察抽样,研究了它们的关联行为。在线状样带抽样过程中,总是能看到绿疣猴距离其他物种的猴子不到50米,尤其是猕猴属的猴子。在对习惯化猴群的研究中,我们发现一群绿疣猴与一大群戴安娜猴密切关联了三年多。在超过80%的扫描样本中,两组猴子的成员彼此距离在50米以内;两组猴子共享同一活动范围,但在树冠层的不同部位觅食,饮食重叠很少;这种关联是由疣猴的行为维持的。绿疣猴是蒂瓦伊岛上唯一一种比预期更频繁地出现在第二个戴安娜研究组成员不到50米范围内的猴子物种,不过在这种情况下,两个物种在不到12%的样本中存在关联。在这两种情况下,我们都检测到了关联频率的逐月变化。我们认为,绿疣猴作为一种进化策略的一部分,有与其他猴子关联的强烈倾向;观察到的关联模式取决于该地区其他物种的活动范围习性和群体分布模式;并且这种策略之所以进化,是因为它降低了以小群体分散觅食的小型猴子的捕食风险。