First Observation of Vervet Monkeys Chlorocebus pygerythrus Feeding on Seagrass Thalassodendron ciliatum along the Tanzanian Coast

John V Lyakurwa
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Vervet monkeys are known to feed on terrestrial grasses e.g. Panicum spp, Sporobolus spp, Cynodon spp and Cenchrus mezianus (Leeke) Morrone (Struhsaker, 1967; Butynski et al., 2013), but there are no records of seagrasses as part of their diet. This note reports the first observation of C. pygerythrus feeding on the seagrass Thalassodendron ciliatum (Forssk.) Hartog (Cymodoceaceae) at Saadani National Park, on the shores of the Indian Ocean. Saadani National Park is one of 22 national parks in mainland Tanzania, and the only one bordering the Indian Ocean (TANAPA, 2020). It comprises the former Mkwaja ranch area, former Saadani game reserve and the Zaraninge forest (Treydte et al., 2005) and is located within the Zanzibar-Inhambane phytochorion (White, 1983). The mean annual temperature in the park is 25°C (Treydte et al., 2005) with the annual rainfall considerably variable between years (Tobler et al., 2003), generally averaging to 900 mm per annum (Treydte et al., 2005). Rainfall in the park is bimodal with a short rainy season from October to December and a long rainy season from March to early June (Treydte et al., 2005; Cochard & Edwards, 2011). Like most of the Western Indian Ocean, the hydrography of Saadani coast is shaped by northeast and southeast monsoon winds which occur between November to March and May to September respectively (Richmond, 2002; Lymo, 2011; Semba et al., 2019). The surface water temperature ranges from 20 to 30°C and is higher during northeast monsoon winds (Richmond, 2002; Lymo, 2011; Peter et al., 2018). At least 10 seagrass species are known along the Western Indian Ocean (Richmond, 2002; Gullstrom et al., 2002) with Thalassodendron ciliatum being among the most common (Gullstrom et al., 2002). A group of 22 vervet monkeys were observed on 31 August 2019 foraging along the shores of the Saadani National Park (6°01'42\"S, 38°46'44\"E ) for two hours from 10:00 h to 12:00 h during the low tide. The monkeys spent almost half of the time feeding on the terrestrial herbs Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers., Sporobolus sp, Panicum sp and Anthericum sp on the supralittoral zone, before entering the littoral zone where they foraged on drift patches of the seagrass Thalassodendron ciliatum (figures 1 & 2). Identification of the seagrass followed Richmond (2002). The monkeys were observed eating rhizomes and shoots of T. ciliatum while avoiding the roots and leaves. Both direct mouth scrape and hand-to-mouth movements were used when the monkeys were feeding on the terrestrial grasses but only hand-to-mouth movements were used when feeding on T. ciliatum. A number of studies on non-human primates utilizing marine foods exist, in which marine animals dominate as food items (Son, 2003; Stewart et al., 2008; Lewis & O’Riain, 2017), especially invertebrates (Son, 2003).These reports indicate that marine resources contribute only small proportions of the primate’s food and that the animals invest little of their time on these feeding grounds (Lewis & O’Riain, 2017). However, detailed studies on feeding behaviour of vervet monkeys in Saadani National park will shed more light on feeding habits of  primates along the Tanzanian coast. This observation supports the opportunistic nature of vervet monkeys as  they are known to take advantage of available food resources (Struhsaker, 1967; Butynski et al., 2013). This is the first reported record of the seagrass T. ciliatum constituting a food item in the diet of vervet monkeys despite the occurrence of this seagrasses along parts of the distribution range of vervet monkeys.","PeriodicalId":143820,"journal":{"name":"Journal of East African Natural History","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-07-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of East African Natural History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2982/028.109.0102","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

The vervet monkey, Chlorocebus pygerythrus (F. Cuvier, 1821), is among the most abundant and widely distributed primates in eastern and southern Africa (Butynski et al., 2013). In Tanzania, it is found throughout most of the country, and in some places, forages in human settlement areas (Foley et al., 2014). Chlorocebus pygerythrus is an opportunistic omnivore, with flowers, leaves, seeds and invertebrates contributing a major part of its diet (Struhsaker, 1967; Wrangham & Waterman, 1981; Lee & Hauser, 1998; Butynski et al., 2013; Foley et al., 2014). Vervet monkeys are known to feed on terrestrial grasses e.g. Panicum spp, Sporobolus spp, Cynodon spp and Cenchrus mezianus (Leeke) Morrone (Struhsaker, 1967; Butynski et al., 2013), but there are no records of seagrasses as part of their diet. This note reports the first observation of C. pygerythrus feeding on the seagrass Thalassodendron ciliatum (Forssk.) Hartog (Cymodoceaceae) at Saadani National Park, on the shores of the Indian Ocean. Saadani National Park is one of 22 national parks in mainland Tanzania, and the only one bordering the Indian Ocean (TANAPA, 2020). It comprises the former Mkwaja ranch area, former Saadani game reserve and the Zaraninge forest (Treydte et al., 2005) and is located within the Zanzibar-Inhambane phytochorion (White, 1983). The mean annual temperature in the park is 25°C (Treydte et al., 2005) with the annual rainfall considerably variable between years (Tobler et al., 2003), generally averaging to 900 mm per annum (Treydte et al., 2005). Rainfall in the park is bimodal with a short rainy season from October to December and a long rainy season from March to early June (Treydte et al., 2005; Cochard & Edwards, 2011). Like most of the Western Indian Ocean, the hydrography of Saadani coast is shaped by northeast and southeast monsoon winds which occur between November to March and May to September respectively (Richmond, 2002; Lymo, 2011; Semba et al., 2019). The surface water temperature ranges from 20 to 30°C and is higher during northeast monsoon winds (Richmond, 2002; Lymo, 2011; Peter et al., 2018). At least 10 seagrass species are known along the Western Indian Ocean (Richmond, 2002; Gullstrom et al., 2002) with Thalassodendron ciliatum being among the most common (Gullstrom et al., 2002). A group of 22 vervet monkeys were observed on 31 August 2019 foraging along the shores of the Saadani National Park (6°01'42"S, 38°46'44"E ) for two hours from 10:00 h to 12:00 h during the low tide. The monkeys spent almost half of the time feeding on the terrestrial herbs Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers., Sporobolus sp, Panicum sp and Anthericum sp on the supralittoral zone, before entering the littoral zone where they foraged on drift patches of the seagrass Thalassodendron ciliatum (figures 1 & 2). Identification of the seagrass followed Richmond (2002). The monkeys were observed eating rhizomes and shoots of T. ciliatum while avoiding the roots and leaves. Both direct mouth scrape and hand-to-mouth movements were used when the monkeys were feeding on the terrestrial grasses but only hand-to-mouth movements were used when feeding on T. ciliatum. A number of studies on non-human primates utilizing marine foods exist, in which marine animals dominate as food items (Son, 2003; Stewart et al., 2008; Lewis & O’Riain, 2017), especially invertebrates (Son, 2003).These reports indicate that marine resources contribute only small proportions of the primate’s food and that the animals invest little of their time on these feeding grounds (Lewis & O’Riain, 2017). However, detailed studies on feeding behaviour of vervet monkeys in Saadani National park will shed more light on feeding habits of  primates along the Tanzanian coast. This observation supports the opportunistic nature of vervet monkeys as  they are known to take advantage of available food resources (Struhsaker, 1967; Butynski et al., 2013). This is the first reported record of the seagrass T. ciliatum constituting a food item in the diet of vervet monkeys despite the occurrence of this seagrasses along parts of the distribution range of vervet monkeys.
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坦桑尼亚海岸黑尾猴以海草为食的首次观察
长尾猴,Chlorocebus pygerythrus (F. Cuvier, 1821),是非洲东部和南部数量最多、分布最广泛的灵长类动物之一(Butynski et al., 2013)。在坦桑尼亚,它遍布全国大部分地区,在一些地方,在人类定居区觅食(Foley et al., 2014)。pygerythrus是一种机会性杂食性动物,以花、叶、种子和无脊椎动物为主要食物(Struhsaker, 1967;Wrangham & Waterman, 1981;Lee & Hauser, 1998;Butynski等,2013;Foley et al., 2014)。众所周知,黑尾猴以陆生草为食,如Panicum spp、Sporobolus spp、Cynodon spp和Cenchrus mezianus (Leeke) Morrone (Struhsaker, 1967;Butynski et al., 2013),但没有海草作为其饮食的一部分的记录。本文报道了首次观察到的pygerythrus以海草Thalassodendron ciliatum (Forssk.)为食。位于印度洋海岸的Saadani国家公园里的Hartog (cymodocaceae)。萨达尼国家公园是坦桑尼亚大陆22个国家公园之一,也是唯一一个与印度洋接壤的国家公园(TANAPA, 2020)。它包括前Mkwaja牧场地区,前Saadani野生动物保护区和Zaraninge森林(Treydte等人,2005年),位于桑给巴尔-伊纳姆巴内植物群落内(White, 1983年)。公园的年平均温度为25°C (Treydte et al., 2005),年降雨量在年份之间变化很大(Tobler et al., 2003),一般平均为每年900毫米(Treydte et al., 2005)。公园降雨呈双峰型,10 - 12月为短雨季,3 - 6月初为长雨季(Treydte et al., 2005;Cochard & Edwards, 2011)。与西印度洋的大部分地区一样,萨达尼海岸的水文地形受东北和东南季风的影响,分别发生在11月至3月和5月至9月(Richmond, 2002;Lymo, 2011;Semba et al., 2019)。地表水温度在20 - 30°C之间,东北季风吹时温度更高(Richmond, 2002;Lymo, 2011;Peter et al., 2018)。西印度洋沿岸已知至少有10种海草(Richmond, 2002;Gullstrom et al., 2002),其中最常见的是海棘(Thalassodendron ciliatum)。2019年8月31日,在退潮期间,从10点到12点,观察到22只长尾猴在Saadani国家公园(6°01'42"S, 38°46'44"E)的海岸觅食了两个小时。猴子几乎有一半的时间以陆生草本植物Cynodon dactylon为食。珀耳斯。, Sporobolus sp ., Panicum sp .和Anthericum sp .在进入滨海带之前,在滨海带上觅食海草Thalassodendron ciliatum的漂流斑块(图1和2)。在Richmond(2002)之后,对海草进行了鉴定。观察到这些猴子吃纤毛藤的根茎和芽,而不吃根和叶。当猴子以陆生草为食时,直接用嘴刮食和手对嘴移动,但当猴子以纤毛草为食时,只使用手对嘴移动。存在一些关于非人类灵长类动物利用海洋食物的研究,其中海洋动物作为食物占主导地位(Son, 2003;Stewart et al., 2008;Lewis & O 'Riain, 2017),尤其是无脊椎动物(Son, 2003)。这些报告表明,海洋资源仅占灵长类动物食物的一小部分,动物在这些觅食地投入的时间很少(Lewis & O 'Riain, 2017)。然而,对Saadani国家公园里的长尾猴摄食行为的详细研究将会让我们更清楚地了解坦桑尼亚沿海灵长类动物的摄食习惯。这一观察结果支持了长尾猴的机会主义性质,因为它们已知会利用可用的食物资源(Struhsaker, 1967;Butynski et al., 2013)。这是首次报道的海草T. ciliatum作为一种食物出现在黑尾猴的饮食中,尽管这种海草出现在黑尾猴的部分分布范围。
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