Differences in daily life between semiprovisioned and wild‐feeding baboons
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Primatology
- Vol. 15 (3) , 213-221
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajp.1350150304
Abstract
Activity budgets and social aspects of feeding, among the adult females in a group of semiprovisioned baboons that fed from a garbage dump were compared with those of adjacent wild‐feeding groups in Amboseli National Park, Kenya, during the dry seasons of 1984 and 1985. Statistically significant differences were found in time spent feeding, distance travelled, and the relationship between dominance rank and time spent feeding. The garbage‐feeding animals fed for 20% of the time and rested for almost 50%, in contrast to approximately 60% and 10%, respectively, for the wild‐feeding animals. Speed of travel, length of day‐route, and home range size were greatly reduced for the garbage‐feeding animals. Use of sleeping trees and day route were highly regular in contrast to the unprovisioned group. At the garbage dump, time spent feeding was correlated with dominance rank among the adult females of this study. This was not the case for feeding on wild foods. Human enriched food sources offer the opportunity to study limiting factors and relationships between ecology and behavior. However, these conditions lead to human–animal conflicts that may be to the animals' long‐term detriment. Conservation and management implications are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- The impact of locomotor energetics on mammalian foragingJournal of Zoology, 1987
- Correlates of agonistic and competitive interactions in pregnant baboonsAmerican Journal of Primatology, 1987
- Ecology and behaviour of a pest primate: vervet monkeys in a tourist‐lodge habitatAfrican Journal of Ecology, 1985
- Demography of Amboseli baboons, 1963–1983American Journal of Primatology, 1985
- Population Dynamics of Japanese Monkeys with Special Reference to the Effect of Artificial FeedingFolia Primatologica, 1982
- Inferring kinship from behaviour: Maternity determinations in yellow baboonsAnimal Behaviour, 1981
- Feeding Behavior of Yellow Baboons (Papio cynocephalus): Relationship to Age, Gender and Dominance RankFolia Primatologica, 1980
- Primate ecology and social organizationJournal of Zoology, 1977
- Effects of artificial feeding on aggressive behaviour of rhesus monkeys in IndiaAnimal Behaviour, 1976
- Baboons, Space, Time, and EnergyAmerican Zoologist, 1974