Foraging in a variable environment: Weather patterns and the behavioral ecology of baboons

被引:136
作者
Bronikowski, AM
Altmann, J
机构
[1] CHICAGO ZOOL SOC,DEPT CONSERVAT BIOL,BROOKFIELD,IL 60513
[2] UNIV CHICAGO,COMM EVOLUTIONARY BIOL,CHICAGO,IL 60637
[3] UNIV CHICAGO,DEPT ECOL & EVOLUT,CHICAGO,IL 60637
[4] NATL MUSEUMS KENYA,INST PRIMATE RES,NAIROBI,KENYA
关键词
baboon; activity budget; intrapopulation variability; meteorological variation; environmental constraints;
D O I
10.1007/s002650050262
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
We investigated the long-standing premise in behavioral ecology that the environment affects behavior and demography. We did this by evaluating the extent to which year-to-year variability in the behavioral ecology of a nonhuman primate population could be modeled from meteorological patterns. Data on activity profiles and home range use for baboons (Papio cynocephalus) in Amboseli, Kenya, were obtained over a 10-year period for three social groups: two completely wild-foraging ones, and a third that supplemented its diet with refuse from a nearby tourist lodge. The relationships across years among activity budgeting, travel distance, group size, and measures of temperature and rainfall patterns differed among the social groups. Although meteorological variation generally correlated with behavioral variation in the completely wild-foraging groups, different weather variables and direction of relationships resulted for each group. In addition, different relationships among variables were found before and after home-range shifts. The food-enhanced group spent half as much time foraging as did the other groups and therefore could be used to evaluate the relative extent to which foraging time was a limiting factor for resting and social time. Under their relaxed ecological conditions, the food-enhanced animals increased resting time much more than social time. These findings, combined with supplementary information on the population, lead us to suggest that baboons use a suite of interrelated responses to ecological variability that includes not only changes in activity budgets, but also home-range shifts, changes in the length of the active period, and changes in group size through fissions. Moreover, our results imply that group differences as well as interpopulational and interspecific differences in behavioral ecology provide significant sources of variability. Therefore, social groups rather than populations may be the appropriate unit of analysis for understanding the behavioral ecology of baboons and other highly social primates. The different patterns we observed among groups may have fitness consequences for the individuals in those groups and thereby affect population structure over time.
引用
收藏
页码:11 / 25
页数:15
相关论文
共 65 条
[1]   OPTIMAL TRAITS WHEN THERE ARE SEVERAL COSTS - THE INTERACTION OF MORTALITY AND ENERGY COSTS IN DETERMINING FORAGING BEHAVIOR [J].
ABRAMS, PA .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 1993, 4 (03) :246-253
[2]  
ALBERTS SC, IN PRESS ANIM BEHAV
[3]   OBSERVATIONS ON BABOONS, PAPIO-ANUBIS, IN AN ARID REGION IN ETHIOPIA [J].
ALDRICHBLAKE, FP ;
BUNN, TK ;
DUNBAR, RIM ;
HEADLEY, PM .
FOLIA PRIMATOLOGICA, 1971, 15 (1-2) :1-+
[4]   BODY-MASS AND GROWTH-RATES IN A WILD PRIMATE POPULATION [J].
ALTMANN, J ;
ALBERTS, S .
OECOLOGIA, 1987, 72 (01) :15-20
[5]   DEMOGRAPHY OF AMBOSELI BABOONS, 1963-1983 [J].
ALTMANN, J ;
HAUSFATER, G ;
ALTMANN, SA .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, 1985, 8 (02) :113-125
[6]  
ALTMANN J, 1977, Primates, V18, P315, DOI 10.1007/BF02383111
[7]   OBSERVATIONAL STUDY OF BEHAVIOR - SAMPLING METHODS [J].
ALTMANN, J .
BEHAVIOUR, 1974, 49 (3-4) :227-267
[8]   DIFFERENCES IN DAILY LIFE BETWEEN SEMIPROVISIONED AND WILD-FEEDING BABOONS [J].
ALTMANN, J ;
MURUTHI, P .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, 1988, 15 (03) :213-221
[9]  
Altmann J., 1988, P403
[10]   PHYSICAL MATURATION AND AGE ESTIMATES OF YELLOW BABOONS, PAPIO-CYNOCEPHALUS, IN AMBOSELI NATIONAL-PARK, KENYA [J].
ALTMANN, J ;
ALTMANN, S ;
HAUSFATER, G .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, 1981, 1 (04) :389-399