夜间爪哇懒猴的目标导向旅行

IF 1.7 Q3 ECOLOGY Ecologies Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.3390/ecologies4030037
S. Poindexter, Vincent Nijman, Muhammed Ali Imron, K. Nekaris
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引用次数: 0

摘要

动物在其活动范围内寻找重要资源的能力是其生态的一个关键方面。为了到达这些资源,动物采用不同的导航过程,这取决于它们对环境的外中心或自我中心的看法。这项研究的目的是确定爪哇懒猴(Nycticebus javanicus),一种在东南亚发现的夜间树栖灵长类动物,在导航环境时是否使用某种形式的认知地图和空间记忆。利用在印度尼西亚西爪哇的Little Fireface项目现场站收集的6只雄性和7只雌性的行为和GPS数据,我们测量了它们重访重要觅食树、路线重叠和个体显著改变方向的点的频率。我们发现所有个体在觅食和觅食时主要使用四种树种。懒猴还显示出高度的路线重叠,这使我们得出结论,它们可能利用基于路线的认知地图,其中某些地标与它们的夜间运动是不可或缺的。很少有研究专门关注野生链球菌的空间认知;在这里,我们展示了爪哇懒猴用来到达远处/视线外资源的导航机制。链霉素物种对空间认知的明显依赖表明,在灵长类动物认知进化的早期阶段,这可能是一种重要的选择压力。除了空间记忆在理论论述中的重要性外,理解懒猴的缓慢运动在保护中也有实际应用,特别是在从非法野生动物贸易中获救的个体所进行的大量易位方面。我们讨论了在此类发布中考虑软发布培训和监控的重要性。
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Goal-Directed Travel in the Nocturnal Javan Slow Loris (Nycticebus javanicus)
An animal’s ability to navigate its home range in search of essential resources is a key aspect of its ecology. To reach these resources, animals employ varying navigational processes depending on their exocentric or egocentric view of their environment. The goal of this study was to determine if the Javan slow loris (Nycticebus javanicus), a nocturnal arboreal primate found in southeast Asia, uses some form of cognitive map and spatial memory while navigating their environment. Using behavioural and GPS data of six males and seven females collected at the Little Fireface Project field station based in West Java, Indonesia, we measured their frequency of revisiting important feeding trees, route overlap, and points where individuals significantly changed directions. We found that all individuals predominantly used four tree species while feeding and foraging. The lorises also displayed a high level of route overlap, leading us to conclude that they likely utilize a route-based cognitive map where certain landmarks are integral to their nightly movement. Few studies have specifically focused on strepsirrhine spatial cognition in the wild; here, we show the navigational mechanism used by the Javan slow loris to reach distant/out-of-sight resources. The evident reliance on spatial cognition in a strepsirrhine species suggest that it could be an important selective pressure for primates at the earliest stages of primate cognitive evolution. In addition to the importance of spatial memory in theoretical discourse, understanding slow loris movement has practical applications to conservation, particularly regarding the numerous translocations undertaken by individuals rescued from the illegal wildlife trade. We discuss the importance of considering soft release training and monitoring in such releases.
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