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1.
M J Kessler E C Phoebus R G Rawlins J E Turnquist W T London 《Journal of medical primatology》1983,12(4):209-217
Free-ranging patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas) from El Guayacán island, Puerto Rico, were surveyed to establish values for the hemogram, serum biochemicals, calcium, and phosphorus. Results were tabulated for males and nonpregnant/nonlactating, pregnant, and lactating females. A summary of blood values from previous studies on captive patas monkeys was also tabulated for comparison. 相似文献
2.
Based on long-term, although intermittent, observations (2 years 4 months of 14 years), we present data on birth seasonality,
age at first birth, interbirth intervals, mortality rates, age at first emigration, and population change of a wild population
of West African patas monkeys (Etythrocebus patas patas) in northern Cameroon. Birth season was from the end of December until the middle of February, corresponding to the mid-dry
season. In spite of large body size, the patas females had the earliest age at first birth (36.5 monthsold) and the shortest
interbirth intervals (12 months) compared to the closely related wild forest guenons. Age at first emigration of the males
was considered to occur between 2.5 and 4.5 years. The group size of the focal group drastically decreased between 1984 and
1987, and steadily increased until 1994, then decreased again in 1997. The neighboring group also showed a similar trend in
group size. The population decreases were likely to be caused by drought over 3 years. Annual crude adult mortality rate was
4% during population increase periods (PIP) between 1987 and 1994. It rose to 22% during all the periods (AP), including drought
over 3 years. Despite their smaller body size, the rate of the wild forest guenons (Cercopithecus mitis) (4%) was the same and much lower than those of the patas during PIP and AP, respectively. The annual average juvenile mortality
rate was 13% during PIP and it also rose to 37% during AP. That of wild forest guenons (C. ascanius) (10–12%) was a little lower and much lower than those of the patas during PIP and AP, respectively. These findings were
consistent with Charnov's theoretical model of mammalian life-history evolution in that patas with high adult and juvenile
mortality showed early and frequent reproduction in spite of large body size. Charnov also considered high adult mortality
as a selective force and high juvenile mortality as a density-dependent consequence of high fecundity. Our results support
the former but not the latter research findings. 相似文献
3.
Patas monkeys may be especially vulnerable to local extinction because they live in relatively small, female-philopatric groups at low densities and are strongly polygynous. We assessed a patas monkey population in Kenya's 9,700 km(2) Laikipia District over 25 years, using data collected in 1979-1981 and 1992-2004. The data were based on intensive observations of three study groups, "on the ground" counts, and surveys of Laikipia residents. In 1979-1981, a minimum of 415 patas monkeys lived in 14-15 groups. By 2000, the best estimate suggested 310-445 patas monkeys living in 13-17 groups over a greater surveyed area, suggesting that patas monkeys in Laikipia may have undergone a slight decline in numbers over time. Their distribution, however, was similar over time. The relative stability of this population has likely been the result of beneficial co-existence with large-scale cattle ranching. Outside Laikipia, substantial habitat alteration from rising human populations has coincided with the near disappearance of patas monkeys where they were previously more numerous. The small population in Laikipia, probably the largest remaining in Kenya, may therefore be critical to the continued existence of patas monkeys in that country and may be dependent on maintenance of large-scale ranches. Such land use provides patas monkeys with water and broad expanses of Acacia drepanolobium woodlands, the habitat to which patas are restricted in Laikipia. 相似文献
4.
Caged patas monkeys were evaluated monthly to determine changes in the color of their hair during infancy, adolescence, pregnancy and lactation. From birth until 3 months of age the facial and anterior crown hairs were short, sparse, and completely black. The body fur was a fine, short, fawn-colored hair mixed with longer black hairs which produced a black-tipped effect. During the second 3 months of life the body fur and anterior crown fur became coarser, longer, and changed to a red-brown color. The facial hairs thickened and became longer, but remained totally black. A thin line of black hairs outlined the brow and temple. The black chin hairs were gradually replaced by white from 7 to 24 months of age, and the upper lip hairs changed from black to white during the second year of life. Color changes related to pregnancy and lactation were confined to the nosepatch, cheek, and browline hair. The nosepatch and cheek hair changed from black or grey to completely white, and the browline faded to the approximate color of the body fur. These changes began approximately at the end of the second trimester of pregnancy, maximized during the third month of lactation, began to darken 1 to 2 months later, and returned completely to the black, nonpregnant colors approximately 1 year postpartum. In one nonlactating female, the darkening was delayed until 500 days postpartum and in one female ovariectomized in the light color phase, the darkening was complete 200 days later. The cause of these changes is believed to be hormonal, resulting from altered endocrine function during maturation and pregnancy, which may alter melanocyte stimulating hormone activity. 相似文献
5.
Nakagawa N 《American journal of primatology》2008,70(3):238-246
The socio-ecological model predicts that the quality, distribution, and patch size of food resources determines the dominance hierarchy of female monkeys based on the type of food competition they experience. Comparative studies of closely related species have evaluated the socio-ecological model and confirmed its validity. For example, female patas monkeys in Laikipia, Kenya, form a nonlinear and unstable dominance hierarchy (i.e., egalitarian), whereas females of sympatric, closely related savannah monkeys form a linear and stable dominance hierarchy (i.e., despotic), in accordance with the model's predictions of the characteristics of food resources. I compared agonistic interactions involving food between patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas) and sympatric savannah monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) in Kala Maloue, Cameroon. I found linear dominance hierarchies not only in savannah monkeys, but also in patas monkeys in Kala Maloue. The rates of agonistic interactions during feeding between patas monkeys were equivalent to those between savannah monkeys in Kala Maloue; further, these rates were significantly higher than those of both Laikipia patas and savannah monkeys. The results imply that patas monkeys in Kala Maloue are not egalitarian, but are despotic, similar to savannah monkeys. Disparity in the dominance hierarchies of patas monkeys between Kala Maloue and Laikipia were attributable to the differences in the characteristics of food resources. Although patas monkeys in Laikipia subsist on small and dispersed food resources within a high-density area, those in Kala Maloue subsisted on food resources that were clumped in intermediate-sized patches within a low-density area. This study shows that the socio-ecological model is applicable not only for interspecific comparisons but also for intraspecific comparisons. 相似文献
6.
An habituated group of wild patas monkeys was observed in Kenya for 550 h in 1984. Observations were made primarily during an interval that, as previous studies at the same site had demonstrated, coincided with the annual mating and conception periods. Earlier field studies of patas at other sites had reported that heterosexual patas groups had only a single resident adult male and that mating was harem-polygynous. At the Kenya site, by contrast, as many as six males were simultaneously resident and mated in the group during the conception period. Males adopted a variety of tactics to gain access to receptive females, ranging from opportunistic mating to attempts at sequestration that resembled consort behavior in other cercopithecoids such as savanna baboons and rhesus macaques. Aggressive competition for access to females took place among the males, although the number of completed copulations per male did not bear a positive relation to agonistic dominance rank. For patas monkeys, harem polygyny is only one available option within an overall mating system that is best described as a form of promiscuous polygyny, especially during periods when conception is most likely. 相似文献
7.
Naofumi Nakagawa 《Primates; journal of primatology》2000,41(2):161-174
I examined seasonal, sex, and interspecific differences in activity time budgest and diets of patas (Erythrocebus patas) and sympatric tantalus monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops tantalus) on the basis of 5-day data sets collected in three and two different seasons, respectively, by the method of focal animal
sampling. The seasons included species-specific mating and birth seasons. As compared with not only the birth season but also
conspecific females, both patas resident male and tantalus male spent less time feeding and more time resting, day and night,
in their respective mating seasons. Given that day-resting time includes time for vigilance for non-resident males and receptive
females, this may reflect that males should minimize time spent feeding to allow maximum participation in other fitness-increasing
activities such as mating-relating activities asSchoener (1971) predicted. In both species, the males consumed fruits containing less protein but more calories and showed a high
feeding rate to compensate for the shorter time spent feeding in the mating season. In contrast, females consumed protein-rich
food types (i.e. animals, protein-rich seeds, leaves, and flowers) in the birth season to meet the high demand for protein
due to pregnancy and lactation. Given that the season for males was considered to be not a calendar but a reproductive “season”
(i.e. mating or birth season), both sexes of patas spent more time moving and less time day- and night-resting than did the
tantalus counterparts irrespective of the “season”. Patas subsisted on fruits, gums, and supplementarily lipid-rich seeds
as an energy source and animal matters and protein-rich seeds as a protein source. In contrast, tantalus subsisted on fruits
and lipid-rich seeds as energy and flowers and leaves as protein. 相似文献
8.
Lynne A. Isbell Jill D. Pruetz Michelle Lewis Truman P. Young 《International journal of primatology》1999,20(2):257-272
One of the central dichotomies in primate behavior is between species in which there are relationships among females that include stable dominance relationships, and those in which the relationships include weak or unstable dominance relationships. This dichotomy has been attributed to differences in food resources, with stable dominance hierarchies occurring in species that feed on usurpable foods. We compared rank-related differences in nonagonistic behaviors considered to be tightly linked to ecology in broadly sympatric vervets (Cercopithecus aethiops) and patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas), two closely related cercopithecines that are exemplars of this dichotomy, with the expectation that vervets would exhibit stronger rank differences than patas monkeys in these behaviors. Overall, rank explained more than twice as much variation among vervets as among patas monkeys in ranging behavior, activity budgets, and diet. Vervets did not, however, exhibit stronger rank differences when they used Acacia xanthophloea habitat, in which foods are more usurpable, compared to Acacia drepanolobium habitat, in which foods are less usurpable. In Acacia drepanolobium habitat, to which patas are restricted, higher-ranking vervets converged in behavior with patas monkeys to a greater extent than lower-ranking vervets, suggesting that social constraints interfere with the foraging efficiency of lower-ranking vervets even in habitats in which there are fewer opportunities to usurp foods. 相似文献
9.
Jean E. Turnquist 《American journal of physical anthropology》1983,61(2):211-220
Normal range of joint mobility in the extremities of the patas monkey, Erythrocebus patas, was established for a free-ranging colony of 64 animals at La Parguera, Puerto Rico (Caribbean Primate Research Center). Eighty-five animals that had been caged (30″ × 30″ cages) for up to 5 years were used for comparison. Passive joint mobility of anesthetized animals was measured with a goniometer. Nine parameters (five on the forelimb and four on the hindlimb) were measured on each animal. The data were sorted into subsets according to the animal's age, sex, place of birth, and type of confinement, if any. The number of animals in each subset was recorded and the mean (in degrees) and standard deviation for each parameter were calculated. A P?0.05 on two-tailed Student's t-tests was considered significant. Comparisons between free-ranging males and females showed significant differences in one or two parameters for all age groups. A cross-sectional sample of free-ranging animals of both sexes showed that significant changes in joint mobility occurred only in the first 18 months of life. Joint mobility of all caged animals, however, was highly variable, and even between the more mature animals there were significant differences in several parameters. Almost all comparisons of subsets of the same age and sex showed significant differences between caged and free-ranging animals in at least one parameter. When the caged animals were laboratory-born, however, these differences were significant in five out of nine parameters. The results suggest that, although caging itself affects joint mobility, the age of first confinement may have an even greater effect than the length of the confinement. 相似文献
10.
Lynne A. Isbell 《American journal of primatology》1998,45(4):381-398
A 17 month field study of unprovisioned patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas pyrrhonotus) in Laikipia, Kenya, using both ad libitum and scan sampling techniques, revealed that the diet of patas monkeys consists primarily of gum of Acacia drepanolobium, arthropods (both free-living and concentrated in the swollen thorns of A. Drepanolobium), and other animals. This type of diet is normally found only in smaller-bodied primates. Results from vegetational transects suggest that the larger-bodied patas monkey can subsist on such a diet because gum and arthropods are relatively easily found in their habitat, thereby minimizing search time. Patas monkeys also spend more time moving and less time feeding (while not moving) than other Old World primates. The characteristic long limbs of patas may have evolved in response to feeding on small, nonusurpable, and widely distributed foods, in which access to foods is maximized while time and energy spent in terrestrial travel between food sites are minimized. Am. J. Primatol. 45:381–398, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc. 相似文献
11.
Janice Chism William Rogers 《Ethology : formerly Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie》1997,103(2):109-126
Mammals with restricted breeding seasons often show brief but intense bouts of male competition for mates and male reproductive success has been attributed to male competitive abilities, with the most aggressively successful males able to control access to fertile females, or with females choosing to mate with such males. We studied male competition, mating behaviour and female mate selection in patas monkeys, a primate with a restricted breeding period. We observed two habituated patas groups in Laikipia District, Kenya, during Jun.-Aug. 1983. During the study, one group had a single resident male while the other group had multiple adult males. Within the multimale group, experienced adult males were no more successful than the subadult male. The sole resident male had a significantly higher rate of fights won (p < 0.02) although he did not differ from the multimale group males in rate of aggression or initiation of fights. We found no significant differences in either mating success or female preference based on males' experience or residency. The rates at which males copulated with and were solicited by females were not significantly correlated. We found no evidence of stable dominance ranks among males in the multimale group and aggressive success was not significantly correlated with copulation rate for males in the multimale group. Subadult males were responsible for the majority of copulations observed during the final third of the breeding season. Our observations of this patas population showed a fluid number of males in groups, with the same groups able to shift rapidly from single to multimale structure. This fluidity may result from the large fluctuations in numbers of breeding-age males and females observed over 4 yr of studying this population. 相似文献
12.
Kaplan andZucker (1980) argued that dominance and kinship do not function as important organizing features for intragroup behavior and social
structure among patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas). This paper reviews the available data pertinent to this argument and concludes that dominance probably is not a reliable
structural variable for captive patas, despite its clear development in most groups. In contrast, kinship is a major organizing
feature that strongly affects allogrooming and other affiliative interactions, and socialization. 相似文献
13.
We examined agonistic interactions between adult females in wild, unprovisioned patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas) and vervets (Cercopithecus aethiops). The dominance hierarchy of patas is far less clear than that of vervets. Patas had fewer interactions per dyad, fewer dyads with interactions, and a high percentage (18%) of reversals in which lower-ranking females won in agonistic interactions with higher-ranking females. Although the rank ordering of the kinds of interactions patas and vervets displayed is similar, with avoidance being the most frequently observed agonistic response to approaches by other females, patas were chased and supplanted more often than vervets were. The resources over which females were supplanted also differ between species. Supplants over food comprise smaller proportion of total supplants patas than for vervets. Patas appear to feed on less usurpable foods than vervets. We conclude that (1) Erythrocebus and Cercopithecus spp., except C. aethiops, should not be categorized with other Cercopithecinae, and C. aethiops should not be categorized with other Cercopithecus spp. and Erythrocebus, in discussions and analyses of relationships between females within groups and (2) ecological conditions, i.e., usurpability of foods, can override phylogenetic history as the selective pressure determining the nature of female competitive relationships within groups. 相似文献
14.
The ants that live in the swollen thorns (domatia) of Acacia drepanolobium are staple foods for patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas). To obtain a better understanding of these insects as resources for patas monkeys, we sampled the contents of 1,051 swollen thorns (ant domatia) over a 22-month period from December 1999 to September 2001, in Laikipia, Kenya. First, we confirmed that of the four species of ants that live on A. drepanolobium, Crematogaster sjostedti, the competitively dominant ant in this system, does not rear significant brood in the swollen thorns and is therefore not a major food item of patas monkeys. Second, across the other three species that do use swollen thorns for rearing their brood, C. nigriceps, C. mimosae, and Tetraponera penzigi, the number of worker ants per swollen thorn increased with increasing competitive dominance. Third, although there was considerable month-to-month variation in the number of workers, immatures, and especially alates (winged reproductives) within species, there was less variation across species because ant production was asynchronous. Variation in domatia contents was poorly related to rainfall for each of the three species. Finally, distal thorns held more alates and fewer workers than interior thorns, and branches higher off the ground held more alates and more workers than lower branches. For the numerically dominant C. mimosae, higher branches held significantly more immature ants than did lower branches. Ants are reliable food resources for patas monkeys, and are probably more reliable than many plant resources in this highly seasonal environment. We estimate that patas monkeys may get as much as a third of their daily caloric needs from these ants year-round. As ants and other insects are widely consumed by primates, we suggest that greater consideration be given to species differences in animal food choices and that further studies be conducted to examine the degree to which ants influence energy intake and reproduction in other primates. 相似文献
15.
Sexual selection and sexual signaling have been prominent topics in recent behavioral studies, but limited data have led to controversy regarding these topics. For example, the Hawaiian Drosophila are often cited as examples in which female choice has resulted in the evolution of elaborate male courtship signals, but relatively few data exist to test these claims adequately. We studied D. grimshawi, a lek-forming Hawaiian Drosophila, to determine whether there was evidence for female choice without male competition and to elucidate the possible cues females use to discriminate. Male mating success was found to be nonrandom and males that courted females intensely and deposited many pheromone-containing streaks on the substrate were the most successful. Hence, multiple cues seem to be involved in male mating success in this species. Some males performed only one display, however, and may represent an alternate male mating tactic. The protein content of the adult male diet significantly influenced the level of pheromone streak deposition, and thus, foraging environment may affect the outcome of sexual selection. 相似文献
16.
David Shuker Nick Bateson Heidi Breitsprecher Rebecca O'Donovan Helen Taylor Chris Barnard Jerzy Behnke Sarah Collins Francis Gilbert 《Journal of Insect Behavior》2002,15(5):617-631
The function of male movements during copulation is unclear. These movements may be a result of the necessary mechanics of insemination, or they may also have further function, for instance, stimulating or courting a female during mating, perhaps influencing female mate choice. We present data from three experiments exploring the mating behavior and copulatory movements of the highly promiscuous beetle Psilothrix viridicoeruleus. Male mating success in the struggle over mating was not related to male or female size (measured by weight) but successful males were more vigorous in terms of copulatory movements. These males took longer to mount females but copulated longer and remained mounted longer. We discuss these results in terms of the mating system of Psilothrix and also in terms of observations of the timing of insemination during copulation. We suggest that copulatory movements in this species are best understood as copulatory courtship. 相似文献
17.
Naofumi Nakagawa 《Primates; journal of primatology》1989,30(1):27-34
A preliminary study was carried out on the feeding ecology of patas monkeys in the rainy season in Cameroon. Their daily activity
rhythm revealed two active peaks. The proportion of time spent on feeding with respect to waking time was 30%. Patas monkeys
largely depended on the flowers and buds of herbaceous plants and the larvae of insects for their diet as they ranged widely.
Patas monkeys spent more time in feeding and travelled for a longer distance per day than the sympatric primate species, the
tantalus monkey. It is considered that these findings reflected the large amount of food requirement due to the large body
size, as well as the low density and high degree of dispersal of their food. 相似文献
18.
The relationship between fluctuating asymmetry (FA) and mating success was studied within males of the sphragis-baring butterfly Luehdorfia japonica, which were collected at various periods during their mating season. FA was measured on the forewing and hindwing radius lengths of male butterflies. Mating frequency of males was estimated by assessing the degree of scale loss from their claspers. Males consume scales and use them to form sphragis on the female abdomen during copulation, sealing the ostium bursa for life. Age of males was scored as wing age 0 to 4 according to the wearing of the wing. FA was negatively correlated with mating frequency but positively correlated with wing age, and average FA decreased with mating season. As females have little chance to express mate choice, it is likely that FA is an indicator of male viability: symmetrical males live longer and/or fly more actively, resulting in a higher lifetime mating success compared to asymmetrical males. 相似文献
19.
Mewa Singh H. N. Kumara M. Ananda Kumar Mridula Singh Matthew Cooper 《International journal of primatology》2006,27(2):515-528
In bonnet macaques, males usually disperse between groups and females remain philopatric, but researchers have reported female
transfer. We report a rare case of male influx during the mating season in our bonnet macaque study group in the Anaimalai
Hills. The density of bonnet macaques in the study region was unusually high. The study group had a single, crippled adult
male with a long tenure and 5 adult females. During the mating season, adult females approached and mated with outgroup males,
and then several males entered the group. The adult male left the group without any resistance. The incoming males mated with
3 receptive females, forcibly mated with 2 lactating females, and attacked and killed 2 infants. During the influx, 2 outgroup
females joined the group. The data suggest that male influxes provide an opportunity for infanticide and female transfer,
which can have important fitness consequences even in species in which they rarely occur. 相似文献
20.
Nakagawa N 《Primates; journal of primatology》2003,44(1):3-11
Phytochemical or nutrient analyses of primate diets have revealed clues to their food selection in a single species. On the
other hand, few interspecific comparisons of phytochemical or nutrient composition of primate diets have been made, although
diets are considered to differ in phytochemical or nutrient content from primate species to species, since different species
have different body weights and different morphological and physiological characteristics. I compared the nutrient content
of diet between patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas) and tantalus monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops tantalus) living sympatrically in Cameroon. Patas subsisted on a smaller number of food items, most of which were also tantalus food
items. Then, I compared the protein–fiber ratio and the available energy content of the food items eaten by patas (patas foods)
with those items eaten only by tantalus (tantalus foods). Both variables were higher in patas than tantalus foods, although
there was no significant difference in available energy of plant foods. Next, when I performed discriminant analysis for patas
foods and tantalus foods, employing the above two variables, a discriminant function with positive coefficients for both variables
was obtained. The mean discriminant-function score of patas foods was higher than that of tantalus foods. Despite being somewhat
larger in weight, patas selectively fed on a smaller number of foods of higher quality than did tantalus. I discuss why the
results are inconsistent with a well known body weight–diet relationship (Jarman–Bell principle). Energy-efficient locomotion
enables patas to exploit not only small dispersed food items of high quality but also areas where high-quality foods are distributed
in clumps.
Electronic Publication 相似文献