Department for the Ecology of Animal Societies, Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, Konstanz, Germany.
Centre for Research and Conservation, Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
Am J Primatol. 2023 Jun;85(6):e23486. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23486. Epub 2023 Mar 15.
Primate ranging behavior is associated with numerous social and ecological correlates. Interspecific comparisons of ranging behavior can therefore provide insight into the socio-ecological conditions that characterize a species' niche within its community. We provide the first description of ranging behavior in golden-bellied mangabeys (Cercocebus chrysogaster), using sympatric bonobos (Pan paniscus) as a comparison. Over 6 months, we recorded GPS tracks at 1- and 5-min intervals from one habituated golden-bellied mangabey group and two habituated bonobo communities at LuiKotale, central Democratic Republic of the Congo. We compared estimates of home range size, time spent at different elevations, and hourly travel distances between species. We modeled daily travel distances against total monthly rainfall to investigate seasonal variation in daily ranging. The golden-bellied mangabey home range was similarly sized or larger than each of the two bonobo communities at LuiKotale across estimation methods. Mangabeys visited more of their range per day and spent more time in terra firma forest and less time in swamps than bonobos. Mangabeys traveled significantly farther per day and during midday hours than bonobos, but travel distances did not relate to monthly rainfall in either species. Golden-bellied mangabeys exhibited wide daily ranging behavior that more closely resembled that of sympatric bonobos than other Cercocebus species. Large homes ranges in mangabeys are likely influenced by food availability in terra firma forest, especially as groups appear to travel long distances between fruit trees and terrestrial food patches. Maximizing daytime activity may help mangabeys avoid competition from heterospecifics and indicates temporal niche partitioning in this primate community.
灵长类动物的活动范围与许多社会和生态因素有关。因此,对不同物种活动范围的比较可以深入了解一个物种在其所在群落中的社会生态条件。我们首次描述了金腹长尾猴(Cercocebus chrysogaster)的活动范围,以与其在同一地区的黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)进行比较。在刚果民主共和国中部的 LuiKotale,我们用 1 分钟和 5 分钟的间隔记录了一个适应环境的金腹长尾猴群和两个适应环境的黑猩猩群的 GPS 轨迹,为期 6 个月。我们比较了不同物种的活动范围大小、不同海拔高度的时间分配以及每小时的旅行距离。我们还根据总月降雨量对每日旅行距离进行建模,以研究季节性对每日活动范围的影响。通过不同的估计方法,金腹长尾猴的活动范围与 LuiKotale 的两个黑猩猩群的活动范围相似或更大。与黑猩猩相比,长尾猴每天会更多地访问其活动范围,并且在陆地区域停留的时间更多,在沼泽地停留的时间更少。长尾猴每天的行进距离明显大于黑猩猩,而且在中午时分行进距离更远,但在两个物种中,行进距离都与月降雨量无关。金腹长尾猴表现出广泛的每日活动范围,与同域的黑猩猩更为相似,而与其他长尾猴物种则不太相似。长尾猴的活动范围较大可能是受陆地区域食物供应的影响,尤其是因为群体似乎在果树和陆地食物斑块之间长途跋涉。最大限度地增加白天的活动时间可能有助于长尾猴避免与其他物种的竞争,并表明在这个灵长类动物群落中存在时间生态位分化。