Neal Webb Sarah, Schapiro Steven
Department of Comparative Medicine, Michale E. Keeling Center for Comparative Medicine and Research, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 78602, USA.
Department of Experimental Medicine, The University of Copenhagen, Nørregade 10, 1165 Copenhagen, Denmark.
Animals (Basel). 2023 Feb 23;13(5):803. doi: 10.3390/ani13050803.
Locomotion in non-human primates, including walking, climbing, and brachiating among other types of movement (but not pacing), is a species-typical behavior that varies with age, social housing conditions, and environmental factors (e.g., season, food availability, physical housing conditions). Given that captive primates are typically observed to engage in lower levels of locomotor behaviors than their wild counterparts, increases in locomotion are generally considered to be indicative of improved welfare in captivity. However, increases in locomotion do not always occur with improvements in welfare, and sometimes occur under conditions of negative arousal. The use of time spent in locomotion as a welfare indicator in studies of well-being is relatively limited. We conducted focal animal observations on 120 captive chimpanzees across a series of studies and found higher percentages of time spent in locomotion (1) upon transfer to a new enclosure type, (2) in larger groups with wider within-group age ranges, and fewer males, and (3) with participation in an experimental medication choice paradigm. We also found that, among geriatric chimpanzees, those housed in nongeriatric groups exhibited more locomotion than those living in geriatric groups. Lastly, locomotion was significantly negatively correlated with several indicators of poor welfare and significantly positively correlated with behavioral diversity, one indicator of positive welfare. Overall, the increases in time spent in locomotion observed in these studies were part of an overall behavioral pattern indicative of enhanced welfare, suggesting that an increase in time spent in locomotion itself may be an indicator of enhanced welfare. As such, we suggest that levels of locomotion, which are typically assessed in most behavioral experiments, may be used more explicitly as indicators of welfare in chimpanzees.
非人类灵长类动物的运动,包括行走、攀爬和臂行等其他运动类型(但不包括踱步),是一种物种典型行为,会随年龄、社会居住条件和环境因素(如季节、食物供应、物理居住条件)而变化。鉴于通常观察到圈养灵长类动物的运动行为水平低于其野生同类,运动增加通常被认为表明圈养环境中的福利得到改善。然而,运动增加并不总是随着福利改善而出现,有时会在负面唤醒的情况下发生。在幸福研究中,将运动时间用作福利指标的情况相对有限。我们在一系列研究中对120只圈养黑猩猩进行了焦点动物观察,发现运动时间占比更高的情况出现在:(1)转移到新的圈养类型时;(2)处于年龄范围更广、雄性更少的较大群体中时;(3)参与实验性药物选择范式时。我们还发现,在老年黑猩猩中,生活在非老年群体中的个体比生活在老年群体中的个体表现出更多的运动。最后,运动与几个福利不佳指标呈显著负相关,与积极福利的一个指标行为多样性呈显著正相关。总体而言,这些研究中观察到的运动时间增加是表明福利增强的整体行为模式的一部分,这表明运动时间本身的增加可能是福利增强的一个指标。因此,我们建议,在大多数行为实验中通常评估的运动水平,可以更明确地用作黑猩猩福利的指标。