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Title

Northern pigtailed macaques rely on old growth plantations to offset low fruit availability in a degraded forest fragment.

Authors

Gazagne, Eva; José‐Domínguez, Juan Manuel; Huynen, Marie‐Claude; Hambuckers, Alain; Poncin, Pascal; Savini, Tommaso; Brotcorne, Fany

Abstract

Space‐use and foraging strategies are important facets to consider in regard to the ecology and conservation of primates. For this study, we documented movement, ranging, and foraging patterns of northern pigtailed macaques (Macaca leonina) for 14 months in a degraded habitat with old growth Acacia and Eucalyptus plantations at the Sakaerat Biosphere Reserve in northeastern Thailand. We used hidden Markov models and characteristic hull polygons to analyze these patterns in regard to fruit availability. Macaques' home range (HR) was 599 ha and spanned through a natural dry‐evergreen forest (DEF), and plantation forest. Our results showed that active foraging increased with higher fruit availability in DEF. Macaques changed to a less continuous behavioral state during periods of lower fruit availability in DEF, repeatedly moving from foraging to transiting behavior, while extending their HR further into plantation forest and surrounding edge areas. Concomitantly, macaques shifted their diet from fleshy to dry fruit such as the introduced Acacia species. Our results showed that the diet and movement ecology adaptations of northern pigtailed macaques were largely dependent on availability of native fruits, and reflected a "high‐cost, high‐yield" foraging strategy when fresh food was scarce and dry fruit was available in plantation forest. Conversely, wild‐feeding northern pigtailed macaque populations inhabiting pristine habitat approached a "low‐cost, low‐yield" foraging strategy. Our results outline the effects of habitat degradation on foraging strategies and show how a flexible species can cope with its nutritional requirements. Research highlights: Macaques used a "high‐cost, high‐yield" strategy by extending their ranging with faster and oriented travels to Acacia plantations to cope with low fruit availability in the natural forest.Hidden Markov models produce a novel and robust analysis of primate movement ecology.

Subjects

THAILAND; FOREST degradation; MACAQUES; FORAGE plants; HIDDEN Markov models; TREE farms; FORAGING behavior; RICE hulls

Publication

American Journal of Primatology, 2020, Vol 82, Issue 5, p1

ISSN

0275-2565

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1002/ajp.23117

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