Initiation of feeding by provisioned patas monkeys: Evidence for the protection hypothesis |
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Authors: | Evan L. Zucker |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychology, Loyola University, 70118 New Orleans, Louisiana |
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Abstract: | The applicability of the baboon-based protection hypothesis was tested with data from a provisioned, free-ranging group of Erythrocebus patas.The age/sex class of the individual which first approached and fed from one of the food hoppers during early morning feeding sessions was noted for 114 mornings. The presence of an observer, and periodically, rhesus monkeys,near the hopper made these approaches analogous to progressions described for feral baboons. Adult patas of both sexes approached and ate first significantly more frequently than was expected based on their respective proportions in the group, and immature monkeys less often. For adult females,initiating feeding was not correlated with dominance rank, although females in the middle and lower thirds of the hierarchy (n = 6 in each third) initiated feeding more frequently than did the females in the top third. The protection hypothesis accounts for the observed behavioral pattern, while explanations based on competitive exclusion and dominance relationships do not adequately account for the results. |
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Keywords: | protection hypothesis patas monkeys feeding interspecies interactions |
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