生态松弛的狒狒(Theropithecus gelada)和山魈(Mandrillus sphinx)群体的活动时间预算:当时间不再是限制时会发生什么?

IF 1.3 4区 生物学 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Leticia Ortega-Ballesteros, Nerea Amezcua-Valmala, Sheila Mera-Cordero, M. Hernández-Lloreda, F. Colmenares
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引用次数: 3

摘要

灵长类动物在白天从事四种不重叠的、耗时的、生物相关的活动,即进食、移动、休息和社交。本研究解决了与社会生态学理论和生活史理论相关的两个问题:当个体生活在生态宽松的环境中,在食物供应充足、气候条件良好、没有捕食者的情况下,他们如何重新安排分配给这些活动类别的时间?个人如何在相对没有时间限制的情况下交易不同的活动类别?我们预测进食和移动的时间会减少,休息和社交的时间会增加。我们还探讨了进食时间与休息时间和社交时间的关系,看看当进食时间增加时,哪种活动类别更可有可无。在此,我们分析了一群狒狒(Theropithecus gelada)和一群山魈(Mandrillus sphinx)的活动时间预算,它们被圈养在类似的植被覆盖和大型围栏中,暴露在相同的温带气候条件下,并将它们与野生狒狒和狒狒群体的活动时间预算数据进行了比较。我们发现,它们的活动预算与野生狒狒和狒狒群体的活动预算基本一致,除了活动时间减少了,但仅限于狒狒。我们还发现,进食与休息时间的负相关关系比与社交时间的负相关关系更紧密。这些发现表明,将圈养环境中的个体从它们的野生同伴面临的时间限制和紧迫需求中解放出来并不一定会导致它们活动时间预算的重大重新安排。他们还支持“社交胶水”假说,因为进食时间的增加与休息时间的显著减少有关,而不是社交时间的减少。鉴于时间预算得分在不同环境下的显著重叠,以及所报告的巨大的人口间、群体间和群体内差异,圈养典型与野生典型活动时间预算的概念似乎不受支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Activity time budgets of ecologically relaxed groups of geladas (Theropithecus gelada) and mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx): what happens when time is no longer a constraint?
Primates spend their daytime engaged in four non-overlapping, time-consuming, biologically relevant activities, namely, feeding, moving, resting, and socializing. The present study addressed two issues relevant to socio-ecological theory and life-history theory: how do individuals re-schedule the time allocated to these activity categories when they live in ecologically relaxed settings, where they are food-provisioned, live under benign weather conditions, and are predator-free? How do individuals trade the different activity categories against each other in a relatively time constraint-free setting? We predicted that feeding and moving times should decrease and resting and socializing times should increase. We also explored the relation of feeding time to resting time and social time to see which activity category is more dispensable when feeding time increases. Here we analyzed the activity time budgets of a group of geladas, Theropithecus gelada, and a group of mandrills, Mandrillus sphinx, housed in captivity in similarly vegetated and large-sized enclosures, and exposed to identical temperate-zone climate conditions, and compared them to time budget data available for wild groups of geladas and baboons. We found that they displayed activity budgets that largely matched those reported for wild groups of geladas and baboons, except moving time that decreased, but in geladas solely. We also found a tighter negative relation of feeding to resting time than to social time. These findings indicate that freeing individuals in a captive setting from the time constraints and pressing demands faced by their wild counterparts does not necessarily cause a significant re-scheduling of their activity time budgets. They also support the “social glue” hypothesis, as an increase of feeding time is associated with a significant decrease in resting, not social, time. The notion of a captivity-typical versus wild-typical profile of activity time budgets appears unsupported given the remarkable overlapping of time budget scores across settings and the huge inter-populational, intergroup, and intragroup variation reported.
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来源期刊
Ethology Ecology & Evolution
Ethology Ecology & Evolution 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethology Ecology & Evolution is an international peer reviewed journal which publishes original research and review articles on all aspects of animal behaviour, ecology and evolution. Articles should emphasise the significance of the research for understanding the function, ecology, evolution or genetics of behaviour. Contributions are also sought on aspects of ethology, ecology, evolution and genetics relevant to conservation. Research articles may be in the form of full length papers or short research reports. The Editor encourages the submission of short papers containing critical discussion of current issues in all the above areas. Monograph-length manuscripts on topics of major interest, as well as descriptions of new methods are welcome. A Forum, Letters to Editor and Book Reviews are also included. Special Issues are also occasionally published.
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