Feeding ecology of a highland population of hamadryas baboons (Papio hamadryas) at Borena-Sayint National Park, northern Ethiopia.

IF 1.3 4区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
Primates Pub Date : 2023-09-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-27 DOI:10.1007/s10329-023-01077-6
Hussein Ibrahim, Afework Bekele, Peter J Fashing, Nga Nguyen, Dereje Yazezew, Amera Moges, Vivek V Venkataraman, Addisu Mekonnen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Studying the diet and feeding behavior of primates is essential to understanding their ecology and designing effective conservation plans. Despite decades of study on the hamadryas baboon (Papio hamadryas) in lowland habitats, little is known about the feeding ecology of this species in highland ecosystems. To address this empirical gap, we tracked temporal changes in vegetation abundance and their relation to the dietary choices of hamadryas baboons in highland habitat at Borena-Sayint National Park (BSNP) in northern Ethiopia. We performed behavioral scan sampling on a focal study band of 21-37 hamadryas baboons over a 12-month period. We found that mature and young leaves were the most abundant plant parts throughout the year, while fruits and flowers were the least abundant, with significant seasonal variation that followed the bimodal pattern of rainfall characteristic of the Ethiopian highlands ecosystem. The annual diet of hamadryas baboons at BSNP consisted mostly of fruits (32.0%) and graminoid blades (21.2%), and included 52 food species across 22 families of plants and three families of animals. Food raided from nearby farms accounted for 8.8% of their diet. The availability of fruits and flowers was positively correlated with their consumption, suggesting that these are preferred foods, whereas graminoid blades, and other leaves, appeared to be less preferred foods. The feeding ecology of hamadryas baboons at BSNP differs considerably from that of lowland populations. The well-studied lowland hamadryas baboons in Awash National Park obtain much of their diet from Acacia species and palm fruit, whereas those at BSNP, where Acacia trees are rare and palms are absent, relied on Olinia rochetiana and Rosa abyssinica for a combined 27% of their annual diet. The reliance of hamadryas baboons at BSNP on cultivated crops for nearly one-tenth of their diet leads to conflict with humans and warrants more detailed study so that this issue can be addressed in conservation plans for the area.

Abstract Image

埃塞俄比亚北部Borena Sayint国家公园的高原滨鹬种群(Papio hamadryas)的觅食生态学。
研究灵长类动物的饮食和喂养行为对于了解它们的生态和设计有效的保护计划至关重要。尽管对低地栖息地的滨鹬狒狒(Papio hamadryas)进行了几十年的研究,但对该物种在高地生态系统中的觅食生态知之甚少。为了解决这一经验差距,我们追踪了埃塞俄比亚北部Borena Sayint国家公园(BSNP)高地栖息地的植被丰度的时间变化及其与滨鹬狒狒饮食选择的关系。在12个月的时间里,我们对21-37只哈马德里亚斯狒狒进行了行为扫描采样。我们发现,成熟和幼叶是全年最丰富的植物部分,而果实和花朵最不丰富,季节变化显著,遵循埃塞俄比亚高地生态系统特有的双峰降雨模式。在BSNP,滨鹬狒狒的年度饮食主要由水果(32.0%)和拟禾本科叶片(21.2%)组成,包括22个植物科和3个动物科的52种食物。从附近农场掠夺的食物占他们饮食的8.8%。水果和鲜花的供应量与它们的消费量呈正相关,这表明这些是首选食物,而类禾本科植物叶片和其他叶子似乎不太受欢迎。滨水狒狒在BSNP的觅食生态与低地种群有很大不同。Awash国家公园研究充分的低地滨鹬狒狒的大部分食物来自Acacia物种和棕榈果实,而BSNP的狒狒,那里的Acacia树很罕见,棕榈树也不存在,它们每年的食物中27%都依赖Olinia rochtiana和Rosa abyssinica。在BSNP,近十分之一的食物依赖种植作物,这导致了与人类的冲突,需要进行更详细的研究,以便在该地区的保护计划中解决这个问题。
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来源期刊
Primates
Primates 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
17.60%
发文量
71
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Primates is an international journal of primatology whose aim is to provide a forum for the elucidation of all aspects of primates. The oldest primatological journal, Primates publishes original papers that advance the scientific study of primates, and its scope embraces work in diverse fields covering biological bases of behavior, socio-ecology, learning and cognition, social processes, systematics, evolution, and medicine. Contributions relevant to conservation of natural populations and welfare of captive primates are welcome. Studies focusing on nonprimate species may be considered if their relevance to primatology is clear. Original Articles as well as Review Articles, News and Perspectives, and Book Reviews are included. All manuscripts received are initially screened for suitability by members of the Editorial Board, taking into account style and ethical issues, leading to a swift decision about whether to send the manuscript for external review.
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