Anthropology Department, University of California Santa Cruz, 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA, 95064, USA; Department of Primatology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig, 04103, Germany.
Department of Primatology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig, 04103, Germany; Taï Chimpanzee Project, CSRS, Abidjan, Ivory Coast.
J Hum Evol. 2020 Sep;146:102817. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102817. Epub 2020 Jul 16.
The roots of human hunting and meat eating lie deep in our evolutionary past shared with chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). From the few habituated wild populations, we know that there is considerable variation in the extent to which chimpanzees consume meat. Expanding our knowledge of meat eating frequencies to more, yet unhabituated, populations requires noninvasive, indirect quantitative techniques. We here evaluate the use of stable isotopes to reconstruct meat-eating behavior in wild chimpanzees. We present hair isotope data (n = 260) of two western chimpanzee (P. troglodytes verus) groups from Taï forest (Côte d'Ivoire) and relate them to directly observed amounts of meat consumed, sex/female reproductive state, and group, while controlling for differences between individuals, seasons, and observation efforts. Succeeding seven months of hunting observations, we collected hair of 25 individuals for sequential analysis of δN and δC. Hunting success in the 7-month study period varied between the groups, with 25 successful hunts in the East group and only 8 in the North group. However, our models only found a direct relationship between amounts of meat consumed and variation within individual hair δN values in the East group, but not in the North group and not when comparing between individuals or groups. Although on average East group individuals consumed more than double the amount of meat than North group individuals, their δN values were significantly lower, suggesting that differences in microhabitat are substantial between group territories. The effect of sex/female reproductive state was significant in δN and δC, suggesting it related to access to food or feeding preferences. We conclude that several factors additional to diet are influencing and thus obscuring the isotope ratios in wild chimpanzee hair, particularly when comparing between sexes and social groups.
人类狩猎和肉食的根源可以追溯到我们与黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)共同的进化史中。从少数习惯了的野生种群中,我们知道黑猩猩吃肉的程度存在相当大的差异。为了扩大我们对肉食频率的了解,需要采用非侵入性的、间接的定量技术来研究更多尚未适应的种群。在这里,我们评估了使用稳定同位素来重建野生黑猩猩肉食行为的方法。我们提供了来自象牙海岸泰森林的两个西部黑猩猩(P. troglodytes verus)群体的毛发同位素数据(n=260),并将其与直接观察到的肉类消耗量、性别/雌性生殖状态和群体联系起来,同时控制了个体之间、季节之间和观察努力之间的差异。在成功进行了七个月的狩猎观察之后,我们收集了 25 个人的毛发,用于对 δN 和 δC 进行连续分析。在 7 个月的研究期间,两个群体的狩猎成功率不同,东组有 25 次成功的狩猎,而北组只有 8 次。然而,我们的模型只发现东组个体的肉类消耗量与个体毛发 δN 值的变化之间存在直接关系,而在北组和个体之间或群体之间的比较中则没有发现这种关系。尽管东组个体的平均肉类消耗量是北组个体的两倍多,但他们的 δN 值明显较低,这表明群体领地之间的微生境差异很大。性别/雌性生殖状态对 δN 和 δC 的影响显著,这表明它与食物获取或进食偏好有关。我们得出的结论是,除了饮食之外,还有其他几个因素在影响并因此掩盖了野生黑猩猩毛发中的同位素比值,特别是在比较性别和社会群体时。