Life and death of a disabled wild capuchin monkey infant.

IF 1.3 4区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
Tatiane Valença, Tiago Falótico
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The evolutionary roots of care for injured, ill, and disabled group members remain unclear. The same can be said about care for dying and dead group members. Accumulating case reports in a variety of nonhuman primates can shed light on these origins. Here we provide a detailed account of interactions of a wild capuchin monkey mother and other group members with a disabled infant before and after its death. Limb disability caused the infant to be in unstable positions when carried, which appeared to increase the frequency of body readjustments by the adults and may have contributed to its death. After death, no adults other than the mother made contact with the corpse, but four immatures approached and touched it. The mother foraged only on flies surrounding the corpse while carrying it, stopped several times to set the corpse down on the branches, and let it finally fall as she leapt between trees. The difficulty of carrying disabled and dead individuals up in the trees may help to explain the scarcity of reports in platyrrhines, and suggests that terrestriality and increasing ease of bipedality may have contributed to the evolution of these behaviors in primates.

Abstract Image

一只残疾野生卷尾猴婴儿的生与死。
照顾受伤、生病和残疾群体成员的进化根源尚不清楚。同样的道理也适用于照顾垂死和死去的团队成员。在各种非人类灵长类动物中积累病例报告可以阐明这些起源。在这里,我们提供了一个详细的帐户的互动野生卷尾猴母亲和其他群体成员与残疾婴儿死亡前后。肢体残疾导致婴儿在被抱着时姿势不稳,这似乎增加了成人调整身体的频率,可能是导致婴儿死亡的原因。死后,除了母亲之外,没有成年人接触过尸体,但四个不成熟的人接近并触摸了尸体。母亲在搬运尸体时,只捕食尸体周围的苍蝇,几次停下来把尸体放在树枝上,最后在树间跳跃时让它掉下来。在树上携带残疾和死亡个体的困难可能有助于解释关于长颈犀牛的报道的稀缺,并表明陆地生活和两足行走的日益容易可能促进了灵长类动物这些行为的进化。
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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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