Suppr超能文献

在恩多基森林进行的长期观察解决了有关西部低地大猩猩寻找块菌的持久问题。

Long-term observations in the Ndoki forest resolve enduring questions about truffle foraging by western lowland gorillas.

机构信息

Wildlife Conservation Society, Congo Program, B.P. 14537, Brazzaville, Republic of Congo.

Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université Marien Ngouabi, B.P. 69, Brazzaville, Republic of Congo.

出版信息

Primates. 2024 Nov;65(6):501-514. doi: 10.1007/s10329-024-01151-7. Epub 2024 Sep 20.

Abstract

While there is growing recognition of the importance of traditional knowledge in science, these perspectives remain underrepresented in research publications. However, the synthesis of these approaches has tremendous potential to improve our understanding of wildlife and ecosystems. Toward realizing this aim, we combined local traditional knowledge with molecular classification techniques to investigate "soil scratching" behavior in western lowland gorillas in two localities in Republic of Congo, the Goualougo Triangle and the Djéké Triangle. Daily observations of four gorilla groups for nearly a decade revealed that soil scratching is a foraging strategy to access a deer truffle species, identified here as Elaphomyces labyrinthinus. We also conducted group scans to calculate the time gorillas spent foraging for deer truffles and video focal observations to assess foraging efficiency. There was considerable variation in soil scratching across groups. It was most common in Buka's group, followed by Kingo's group and Mététélé's group. Truffle foraging was rarely observed in the Loya-Makassa group. While the overall distribution of deer truffles seemingly determines the occurrence of this behavior across populations, we found indications of social influences on soil scratching within populations. For example, an adult female transferred from a group in which the behavior was rare to another group where it is common and adjusted her frequencies of soil scratching to that of her new group. Finally, these findings were included in an ecological impact assessment of the Djéké Triangle that prompted conservation managers to shift the location of tourism-associated construction to safeguard this putative cultural behavior.

摘要

虽然人们越来越认识到传统知识在科学中的重要性,但这些观点在研究出版物中仍然代表性不足。然而,将这些方法综合起来具有极大的潜力,可以提高我们对野生动物和生态系统的理解。为了实现这一目标,我们将当地的传统知识与分子分类技术相结合,调查了在刚果共和国的两个地方——瓜拉果国家公园和杰凯三角区的西部低地大猩猩的“土壤划痕”行为。对四个大猩猩群体近十年的日常观察表明,土壤划痕是一种觅食策略,目的是获取一种鹿蕈物种,这里鉴定为 Elaphomyces labyrinthinus。我们还进行了群体扫描,以计算大猩猩寻找鹿蕈的时间,并进行视频焦点观察,以评估觅食效率。不同群体之间的土壤划痕差异很大。布卡的群体中最常见,其次是金戈的群体和梅特泰勒的群体。洛亚-马卡萨的群体中很少观察到寻找鹿蕈的行为。虽然鹿蕈的总体分布似乎决定了这种行为在不同种群中的出现,但我们发现了种群内土壤划痕受到社会影响的迹象。例如,一只从行为罕见的群体中转来的成年雌性大猩猩,调整了自己的土壤划痕频率,以适应新群体的行为模式。最后,这些发现被纳入了对杰凯三角区的生态影响评估中,促使保护管理人员将与旅游相关的建筑地点转移,以保护这种假定的文化行为。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验