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1.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 154(3): 357-64, 2014 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24706453

RESUMO

Responses to environmental variability sheds light on how individuals are able to survive in a particular habitat and provides an indication of the scope and limits of its niche. To understand whether climate has a direct impact on activity, and determine whether vervet monkeys have the behavioral flexibility to respond to environmental change, we examined whether the amount of time spent resting and feeding in the nonmating and mating seasons were predicted by the thermal and energetic constraints of ambient temperature. Our results show that high temperatures during the nonmating season were associated with an increase in time spent resting, at the expense of feeding. Cold temperatures during the nonmating season were associated with an increase in time spent feeding, at the expense of resting. In contrast, both feeding and resting time during the mating season were independent of temperature, suggesting that animals were not adjusting their activity in relation to temperature during this period. Our data indicate that climate has a direct effect on animal activity, and that animals may be thermally and energetically compromised in the mating season. Our study animals appear to have the behavioral flexibility to tolerate current environmental variability. However, future climate change scenarios predict that the time an animal has available for behaviors critical for survival will be constrained by temperature. Further investigations, aimed at determining the degree of behavioral and physiological flexibility displayed by primates, are needed if we are to fully understand the consequences of environmental change on their distribution and survival.


Assuntos
Comportamento Animal/fisiologia , Chlorocebus aethiops/fisiologia , Temperatura , Animais , Antropologia Física , Clima , Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia , Feminino , Masculino , Descanso/fisiologia , Estações do Ano , Comportamento Sexual Animal/fisiologia
2.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 368(1618): 20120351, 2013 May 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23569299

RESUMO

Primate social life and behaviour is contingent on a number of levels: phylogenetic, functional and proximate. Although this contingency is recognized by socioecological theory, variability in behaviour is still commonly viewed as 'noise' around a central tendency, rather than as a source of information. An alternative view is that selection has acted on social reaction norms that encompass demographic variation both between and within populations and demes. Here, using data from vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus aethiops pygerythrus), we illustrate how this alternative approach can provide a more nuanced account of social structure and its relation to contingent events at the ecological and demographic levels. Female vervets in our South African study population live in large groups, where they experience demographic stress and increased levels of feeding competition relative to an East African population in Amboseli, Kenya. Females in the South African population did not respond to this stress by intensifying competition for high-value grooming partners to help alleviate the effects of this stress, did not show the expected rank-related patterns of grooming, nor did they show any spatial association with their preferred grooming partners. Increased group size therefore resulted in a reorganization of female social engagement that was both qualitatively and quantitatively different to that seen elsewhere, and suggests that female vervets possess the flexibility to shift to alternative patterns of social engagement in response to contingent ecological and demographic conditions.


Assuntos
Distribuição Animal , Chlorocebus aethiops , Comportamento Competitivo , Asseio Animal , Comportamento Social , Agressão , Animais , Ecossistema , Feminino , Quênia , Preferência de Acasalamento Animal , Densidade Demográfica , Dinâmica Populacional , África do Sul , Especificidade da Espécie
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