Department of Biological Sciences, Marshall University, Huntington, West Virginia, USA.
Department of Biology, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2024 Jun;86(6):e23617. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23617. Epub 2024 Mar 11.
Primates are adept at dealing with fluctuating availability of resources and display a range of responses to minimize the effects of food scarcity. An important component of primate conservation is to understand how primates adapt their foraging and ranging patterns in response to fluctuating food resources. Animals optimize resource acquisition within the home range through the selection of resource-bearing patches and choose between contrasting foraging strategies (resource-maximizing vs. area-minimizing). Our study aimed to characterize the foraging strategy of a folivorous primate, Verreaux's sifaka (Propithecus verreauxi), by evaluating whether group home range size varied between peak and lean leaf seasons within a seasonally dry tropical forest in Madagascar. We hypothesized that Verreaux's sifaka used the resource maximization strategy to select high-value resource patches so that during periods of resource depression, the home range area did not significantly change in size. We characterized resource availability (i.e., primary productivity) by season at Kirindy Mitea National Park using remotely-sensed Enhanced Vegetation Index data. We calculated group home ranges using 10 years of focal animal sampling data collected on eight groups using both 95% and 50% kernel density estimation. We used area accumulation curves to ensure each group had an adequate number of locations to reach seasonal home range asymptotes. Neither 95% home ranges nor 50% core areas differed across peak and lean leaf resource seasons, supporting the hypothesis that Verreaux's sifaka use a resource maximization strategy. With a better understanding of animal space use strategies, managers can model anticipated changes under environmental and/or anthropogenic resource depression scenarios. These findings demonstrate the value of long-term data for characterizing and understanding foraging and ranging patterns. We also illustrate the benefits of using satellite data for characterizing food resources for folivorous primates.
灵长类动物善于应对资源波动,并表现出一系列反应,以最小化食物短缺的影响。灵长类动物保护的一个重要组成部分是了解灵长类动物如何根据食物资源的波动来调整觅食和活动范围模式。动物通过选择含有资源的斑块,在其家域内优化资源获取,并在不同的觅食策略(资源最大化与面积最小化)之间做出选择。我们的研究旨在通过评估狐猴季节性干燥热带森林中在叶片生长高峰期和叶片稀疏期内组的家域大小是否存在差异,来确定以叶子为食的灵长类动物——白颈狐猴(Propithecus verreauxi)的觅食策略。我们假设白颈狐猴采用资源最大化策略来选择高价值的资源斑块,以便在资源匮乏时期,家域面积不会显著变化。我们使用基林迪米特亚国家公园(Kirindy Mitea National Park)的遥感增强植被指数数据,按季节来描述资源可利用性(即初级生产力)。我们使用 10 年的焦点动物采样数据,通过 95%和 50%核密度估计法,对 8 个狐猴组进行了家域的计算。我们使用面积累积曲线来确保每个组都有足够的地点来达到季节性家域的渐近线。在叶片生长高峰期和叶片稀疏期,95%的家域和 50%的核心区域均无差异,这支持了白颈狐猴采用资源最大化策略的假设。通过更好地了解动物的空间使用策略,管理者可以模拟在环境和/或人为资源减少的情况下,动物的预期变化。这些发现证明了长期数据对于描述和理解觅食和活动范围模式的价值。我们还展示了使用卫星数据来描述食叶灵长类动物的食物资源的好处。