基于饮食多样性指数的洛马科森林倭黑猩猩觅食模式的检验。

IF 1.2 4区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY Folia Primatologica Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-11-02 DOI:10.1159/000519722
Alexana J Hickmott, Michel T Waller, Monica L Wakefield, Nicholas Malone, Colin M Brand, Frances J White
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引用次数: 1

摘要

最佳饮食和功能反应模型用于理解灵长类动物觅食策略的进化。这些模型的预测可以通过检查饮食多样性的地理和季节变化来检验。饮食多样性是一个有用的工具,可以在不同的采样地点和时间段进行饮食比较。倭黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)被认为主要是食果的,以水果、树叶、昆虫、脊椎动物、陆生草本植物和鲜花为食。像倭黑猩猩这样的食果动物,对于研究饮食多样性和测试觅食模式很有价值,因为它们吃各种各样的物种,并且受水果供应的季节性变化的影响。因此,食果灵长类物种允许测试饮食多样性的变化如何与生态因素的变化相关。我们在刚果民主共和国洛马科森林同一保护区(恩德勒和伊耶马)的两个研究营地调查了倭黑猩猩饮食多样性的测量方法。采用Shannon’s、Simpson’s和SW均匀度三种多样性指数,对不同季节和研究期间的行为观察(1984/1985、1991、1995、2014和2017)和粪便洗涤分析(2007和2009)结果进行了比较。N'dele的年平均日粮多样性指数Shannon's H' = 2.04, Simpson's D = 0.82, SW均匀度= 0.88;Iyema的年平均日粮多样性指数Shannon's H' = 2.02, Simpson's D = 0.82, SW均匀度= 0.88。行为观察数据组的饮食多样性指数显著高于粪便洗涤数据组。我们发现,在2017年的行为观察数据集中,食物(水果、叶子和花)的消费量与季节性食物的可用性无关。当倭黑猩猩的食物种类较少时,香农的指数较低,而当水果丰富时,香农的指数较高。最后,我们发现最优饮食模型最好地解释了季节性食物供应和饮食多样性的模式。饮食多样性是理解灵长类动物饮食时需要考虑的一个重要因素,也是理解灵长类动物饮食变化的一个工具,尤其是在食果动物中。饮食多样性在同一物种的不同种群和不同时期有所不同,这对于全面了解灵长类动物饮食如何随时间变化至关重要。
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A Test of Foraging Models Using Dietary Diversity Indices for the Lomako Forest Bonobos.

Optimal diet and functional response models are used to understand the evolution of primate foraging strategies. The predictions of these models can be tested by examining the geographic and seasonal variation in dietary diversity. Dietary diversity is a useful tool that allows dietary comparisons across differing sampling locations and time periods. Bonobos (Pan paniscus) are considered primarily frugivorous and consume fruits, leaves, insects, vertebrates, terrestrial herbaceous vegetation, and flowers. Frugivores, like bonobos, are valuable for examining dietary diversity and testing foraging models because they eat a variety of species and are subject to seasonal shifts in fruit availability. Frugivorous primate species thus allow for tests of how variation in dietary diversity is correlated with variation in ecological factors. We investigated measures of dietary diversity in bonobos at two research camps across field seasons within the same protected area (N'dele and Iyema) in Lomako Forest, Democratic Republic of the Congo. We compared the results of behavioral observation (1984/1985, 1991, 1995, 2014, and 2017) and fecal washing analysis (2007 and 2009) between seasons and study period using three diversity indices (Shannon's, Simpson's, and SW evenness). The average yearly dietary diversity indices at N'dele were Shannon's H' = 2.04, Simpson's D = 0.82, and SW evenness = 0.88 while at Iyema, the indices were Shannon's H' = 2.02, Simpson's D = 0.82, and SW evenness = 0.88. Behavioral observation data sets yielded significantly higher dietary diversity indices than fecal washing data sets. We found that food item (fruit, leaf, and flower) consumption was not associated with seasonal food availability for the 2017 behavioral observation data set. Shannon's index was lower during periods when fewer bonobo dietary items were available to consume and higher when fruit was abundant. Finally, we found that optimal diet models best-explained patterns of seasonal food availability and dietary diversity. Dietary diversity is an essential factor to consider when understanding primate diets and can be a tool in understanding variation in primate diets, particularly among frugivores. Dietary diversity varies across populations of the same species and across time, and it is critical in establishing a complete understanding of how primate diets change over time.

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来源期刊
Folia Primatologica
Folia Primatologica 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
10.50%
发文量
36
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Recognizing that research in human biology must be founded on a comparative knowledge of our closest relatives, this journal is the natural scientist''s ideal means of access to the best of current primate research. ''Folia Primatologica'' covers fields as diverse as molecular biology and social behaviour, and features articles on ecology, conservation, palaeontology, systematics and functional anatomy. In-depth articles and invited reviews are contributed by the world’s leading primatologists. In addition, special issues provide rapid peer-reviewed publication of conference proceedings. ''Folia Primatologica'' is one of the top-rated primatology publications and is acknowledged worldwide as a high-impact core journal for primatologists, zoologists and anthropologists.
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