Bădescu Iulia, Curteanu Cassandra, Sellen Daniel W, Watts David P, Katzenberg M Anne
Département d'anthropologie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Primatol. 2025 Jan;87(1):e23552. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23552. Epub 2023 Oct 1.
Measuring the relative contributions of milk and non-milk foods in the diets of primate infants is difficult from observations. Stable carbon (δC) and nitrogen (δN) isotopes in hair can be used to physiologically track infant feeding through development, but few wild studies have done so, likely due to the difficulty in collecting hair non-invasively. We assessed infant feeding at different ages in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) at Ngogo, Uganda using δC and δN of keratin in 164 naturally shed hairs from 29 infants (61 hairs), 6 juveniles (7 hairs), 28 mothers (67 hairs) and 14 adult males (29 hairs). Hairs were collected when they stuck to feces during defecation or from the ground after chimpanzees groomed or rested. We could not distinguish between the hairs of infants and mothers using strand length and diameter. Infants 1-2 years old were most enriched in C and N and showed means of 1.1‰ in δC and 2.1‰ in δN above their mothers. Infants at 2 years had hair δC values like those of their mothers, which suggests infants began relying more heavily on plants around this age. While mother-infant δC and δN differences generally decreased with offspring age, as is expected when infants rely increasingly more on independent foraging through development, milk seemed to remain an important dietary component for infants older than 2.5 years, as evidenced by continuing elevated δN. We showed that stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes in naturally shed hairs can feasibly detect trophic level differences between chimpanzee infants and mothers. Since it can mitigate some of the limitations associated with behavioral and fecal stable isotope data, the use of hair stable isotopes is a useful, non-invasive tool for assessing infant feeding development in wild primates.
通过观察来衡量灵长类动物幼崽饮食中奶类和非奶类食物的相对贡献是困难的。毛发中的稳定碳(δC)和氮(δN)同位素可用于从生理角度追踪幼崽发育过程中的喂养情况,但很少有针对野生灵长类动物的研究这样做,这可能是因为难以非侵入性地收集毛发。我们利用29只幼崽(61根毛发)、6只幼年个体(7根毛发)、28只母猩猩(67根毛发)和14只成年雄性猩猩(29根毛发)自然脱落毛发中的角蛋白的δC和δN,评估了乌干达恩戈戈野生黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)不同年龄阶段的幼崽喂养情况。毛发是在排便时粘在粪便上或在黑猩猩梳理毛发或休息后从地面上收集到的。我们无法通过毛发长度和直径区分幼崽和母猩猩的毛发。1 - 2岁的幼崽碳和氮含量最高,其δC均值比它们的母亲高1.1‰,δN均值比母亲高2.1‰。2岁幼崽的毛发δC值与它们母亲的相似,这表明幼崽在这个年龄开始更多地依赖植物。虽然母婴之间的δC和δN差异通常随着幼崽年龄的增长而减小,这在幼崽通过发育越来越多地依赖独立觅食时是可以预期的,但奶类似乎仍然是2.5岁以上幼崽饮食中的重要组成部分,持续升高的δN证明了这一点。我们表明,自然脱落毛发中的稳定碳和氮同位素能够切实检测出黑猩猩幼崽和母猩猩之间的营养级差异。由于它可以减轻与行为和粪便稳定同位素数据相关的一些局限性,毛发稳定同位素的应用是评估野生灵长类动物幼崽喂养发育情况的一种有用的非侵入性工具。