This research aimed to understand how sleep site selection compared to other study sites in baboons living in a low-predator density, highly seasonal environment. We compared baboon troops in two distinct habitat types with different seasonal influences within the park, one that flooded annually and one that did not. We compared their sleep site use, reuse, and location relative to home range boundaries and areas of interest (AOIs) with each other and baboons in other areas to understand whether season, habitat familiarity, or position in the home range influenced sleep site choice.
Using GPS collar data taken at 15-min intervals from four gray-footed chacma baboons (Papio ursinus griseipes) in Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique, we established the location of sleep sites, home range boundaries, and AOIs, or places where the baboons repeatedly stopped for more than 15 min. Study subjects ranged either in dense woodland or in a seasonally flooded alluvial floodplain. We used a linear mixed-effects model to predict sleep site reuse based on distance to the habitat edge and AOIs, and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests to determine if morning or evening AOIs influenced sleep site location. We counted the number of reuses of each sleep site before and after the flooding period and compared this data to data in other baboon study sites.
We found that, as in other study sites with less seasonality and higher predation risk, baboons in Gorongosa change sleep site frequently and utilize multiple sleep sites throughout their home range, although they more often use sleep sites closer to the center of their home ranges. However, unlike other studies, we found that the location of the last AOI of the day more strongly predicted sleep site location than the first AOI of the next day in one troop, with baboons traveling further from their sleep site to their first AOI in the morning than from their last evening AOI to the sleep site.
Despite high seasonality and low predator density, baboons in Gorongosa National Park changed sleep sites frequently, as do other studied baboon troops in areas with high nocturnal predation rates. In addition, their propensity to sleep closer to the last AOI of the day may imply that they plan their daily paths toward their chosen sleep site, or that they sleep opportunistically at the end of the day. This study provides a baseline of behavioral data for comparison to other sites and future work in Gorongosa, where predator density continues to rise since the time of the study.