Effects of an Extreme Weather Event on Primate Populations

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Journal of Biological Anthropology Pub Date : 2025-01-06 DOI:10.1002/ajpa.25049
Megan Beardmore-Herd, Meredith S. Palmer, Kaitlyn M. Gaynor, Susana Carvalho
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Abstract

Objectives

With contemporary, human-induced climate change at a crisis point, extreme weather events (e.g., cyclones, heatwaves, floods) are becoming more frequent, intense, and difficult to predict. These events can wreak rapid and significant changes on ecosystems; thus, it is imperative to understand how wildlife communities respond to these disruptions. Primates are perceived as being a largely adaptable order, but we often lack the quantitative data to rigorously assess how they are impacted by extreme environmental change. Leveraging detections from a long-term camera trap survey, this opportunistic study reports the effects of an extreme weather event on a little-studied population of free-ranging primates in Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique.

Materials and Methods

We examined shifts in gray-footed chacma baboon (Papio ursinus griseipes) and vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) spatial distribution and relative abundance following Cyclone Idai—a category four tropical cyclone that struck Mozambique in March 2019.

Results

Baboon spatial distributions were impacted in the first month after the cyclone, with more detections in areas where flooding was less severe. Spatial distributions renormalized once floodwaters began to recede. We describe vervet monkey spatial distribution trends, though sample size limitations inhibited statistical analysis. Primate relative abundance did not appear to substantially decrease following the cyclone, suggesting troops were able to adopt behavioral adjustments to evade rising floodwaters.

Discussion

These findings highlight the behavioral flexibility of Gorongosa's primates and their ability to adapt to extreme—if temporary—disruptions, with implications for primate conservation in the Anthropocene and research into how rapid climatic events may have shaped primate evolution.

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极端天气事件对灵长类动物种群的影响。
随着当代人类引起的气候变化处于危机点,极端天气事件(如旋风、热浪、洪水)正变得更加频繁、强烈和难以预测。这些事件可能对生态系统造成迅速而重大的变化;因此,必须了解野生动物群落如何应对这些破坏。灵长类动物被认为是适应性很强的物种,但我们经常缺乏定量数据来严格评估它们是如何受到极端环境变化的影响的。利用长期相机陷阱调查的检测结果,这项机会主义研究报告了极端天气事件对莫桑比克戈龙戈萨国家公园自由放养的灵长类动物种群的影响。材料和方法:我们研究了2019年3月袭击莫桑比克的四级热带气旋“伊代”(idaii)后灰足查马狒狒(Papio ursinus griseipes)和黑尾猴(Chlorocebus pygerythrus)空间分布和相对丰度的变化。结果:在气旋过后的第一个月,狒狒的空间分布受到影响,在洪水不太严重的地区检测到的狒狒更多。一旦洪水开始退去,空间分布将重新规格化。我们描述了长尾猴的空间分布趋势,尽管样本量的限制抑制了统计分析。灵长类动物的相对丰度在飓风过后并没有明显减少,这表明它们能够通过行为调整来躲避不断上涨的洪水。讨论:这些发现突出了戈龙戈萨灵长类动物的行为灵活性,以及它们适应极端(如果是暂时的)破坏的能力,这对人类世灵长类动物的保护和对气候事件如何快速影响灵长类动物进化的研究具有重要意义。
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