Department of Biology, Federal Rural University of Pernambuco, R. Dom Manuel de Medeiros, s/n, Dois Irmãos, Recife, PE, 52171-900, Brazil.
Department of Anthropology, Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.
Anim Cogn. 2021 May;24(3):629-643. doi: 10.1007/s10071-020-01465-1. Epub 2021 Jan 4.
To increase efficiency in the search for resources, many animals rely on their spatial abilities. Specifically, primates have been reported to use mostly topological and rarely Euclidean maps when navigating in large-scale space. Here, we aimed to investigate if the navigation of wild common marmosets inhabiting a semiarid environment is consistent with a topological representation and how environmental factors affect navigation. We collected 497 h of direct behavioral and GPS information on a group of marmosets using a 2-min instantaneous focal animal sampling technique. We found that our study group reused not only long-route segments (mean of 1007 m) but entire daily routes, a pattern that is not commonly seen in primates. The most frequently reused route segments were the ones closer to feeding sites, distant to resting sites, and in areas sparse in tree vegetation. We also identified a total of 56 clustered direction change points indicating that the group modified their direction of travel. These changes in direction were influenced by their close proximity to resting and feeding sites. Despite our small sample size, the obtained results are important and consistent with the contention that common marmosets navigate using a topological map that seems to benefit these animals in response to the exploitation of clustered exudate trees. Based on our findings, we hypothesize that the Caatinga landscape imposes physical restrictions in our group's navigation such as gaps in vegetation, small trees and xerophytic plants. This study, based on preliminary evidence, raises the question of whether navigation patterns are an intrinsic characteristic of a species or are ecologically dependent and change according to the environment.
为了提高资源搜索效率,许多动物依赖于空间能力。具体来说,据报道,灵长类动物在大尺度空间中导航时主要使用拓扑图,很少使用欧几里得图。在这里,我们旨在研究生活在半干旱环境中的野生普通狨猴的导航是否符合拓扑表示,以及环境因素如何影响导航。我们使用 2 分钟即时焦点动物采样技术,收集了一组狨猴 497 小时的直接行为和 GPS 信息。我们发现,我们的研究小组不仅重复使用长路线段(平均 1007 米),而且还重复使用整个日常路线,这在灵长类动物中并不常见。最常被重复使用的路线段是靠近觅食地点、远离休息地点和树木植被稀疏的区域的路线段。我们还总共确定了 56 个聚类方向变化点,表明该群体改变了它们的行进方向。这些方向的变化受到它们靠近休息和觅食地点的影响。尽管我们的样本量很小,但获得的结果很重要,并且与普通狨猴使用拓扑图进行导航的观点一致,这种导航方式似乎使这些动物受益于对聚类渗出树的利用。基于我们的发现,我们假设卡廷加景观对我们小组的导航造成了物理限制,例如植被间隙、小树和旱生植物。这项基于初步证据的研究提出了一个问题,即导航模式是物种的固有特征,还是受生态环境影响并根据环境变化而变化。