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Published byEmma Jennings Modified over 8 years ago
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Great Ape Ecology: The tale of two species
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Objectives Discuss orangutans, gorillas, and chimpanzees Discuss the two different species or subspecies in each group Describe the ecological differences between them Understand how ecology influences behavior
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Orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) S.E. Asia (Borneo and Sumatra) Map from Delgado and van Schaik Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus (Borneo) Pongo pygmaeus abelii (Sumatra)
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Reach breeding age at 7 but usually don’t produce offspring until 11 years. Gestation 9 months Care for infants for 6 years Interbirth interval is 8 years Live up to late 50’s Philopatric Females
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Males Much larger than females Two kinds of males- –Flanged- large, long calls –Unflanged- smaller, younger, Reach adulthood around 8 years Can force copulations with females Disperse
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Ecology and Diet Highly frugivorous, supplement with other foods. Influenced by fruit availabilty- can store fat when fruit abundent When fruit scarce, modify ranging- eat bark (cambium)
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Fruiting patterns Mast fruiting (but otherwise not as seasonal). Happens 2-7 years. May influence when females cycle. Increase in grouping patterns. Density of fruit sources influences density of orangs.
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Island differences (diet) Sumatra –Overall density higher. –Feed more insects, less bark (graph 1) Borneo –Lower density –Eat more bark and less insects. Forest has higher soil fertility, more productive.
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Island differences (females) Sumatra –More females travel in parties –More strangling figs (keystone resource) Borneo –Less females travel in parties (graph) –Less fig resource, lower density of fruit patches
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Island differences males Sumatra –Flanged males rarely force copulations (2.3%) –Long consortships (flanged) –Unflanged males don’t suceed often but try (45%) Borneo –Both unflanged (90%) and flanged males (24%) force copulations –Flanged male consortships short
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Why male differences? Lower habitat quality (Borneo) means lower rates of association = shorter consortships, lower encounter rates. Borneo= more flanged males (1.6 more)than unflanged. Sumatra = about half as many flanged males as unflanged. (socially induced? Due to higher degree of sociality)?)
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Tool use Seen only in the most dense Sumatran site. Social transmission? Neesia fruit
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Gorillas (Gorilla gorilla) Sexual dimorphism (see map in Doran too Mt. Gorilla = Gorilla gorilla berengei Lowland = Gorilla gorilla gorilla (west) and G. g. grauri (east)
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MOUNTAIN LOWLAND More frugivorous, not as available (pulpy) Consume THV (terrestrial herbaceous vegetation) More folivorous, little seasonality Low level of Within group contest Seasonal changes in diet. Ranges around 500m/day Ranges 1.3-2.6 km /day
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MOUNTAINLOWLAND Groups a bit smaller (some seen with 32?) Group size increases with degree of fruit eating. Groups 2-25 Males migrate (36%) - may tolerate sons (tenure 4-5 yrs) Uni-male/multimale group (age) SOCIAL BEHAVIOR- Males Similar to Mt.
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MOUNTAINLOWLAND Similar to Mt However, more fission- Fusion. (40%) females migrate, sometimes more than 1x Mirrors fruit avail. Not very tolerant of other females SOCIAL BEHAVIOR- females
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Food hypotheses? THV- allows for larger group size (mt) and cohesion (mt). In lowland habitat, aquatic veg. Patchy as is other types of THV (fission - fusion) FRUIT- more competition, increases fission- fusion (WGC). Medium-Large patches can’t hold too many gorillas.
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Chimpanzees (Pan) Sexually dimorphic Dominance hierarchy Use tools, actively hunt Large Communities (100+), Fission Fusion
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Common Chimps (P. troglodytes) Pygmy chimps (P. paniscus) Feed on insects, vegetation, omnivore Females not bonded, leave group Feed on fruit in large trees Females bonded, but leave group (g-g rubbing) Female feed priority
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Common ChimpsPygmy chimps Males bonded, have dominance Males also have dominance but looser, Not bonded May have to do with distribution of females (larger stable groups- can’t defend)
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Common ChimpsPygmy chimps “parties” small, not stable Parties usually same sex Parties larger, more stable Mixed sex parties more common Grooming more often male-male, less male-female (fig 3) Grooming more often female-female, and male-female (fig 3)
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Hypotheses? THV- more abundant and higher quality in pygmy chimp habitat. (but still patchy) FRUIT- larger fruit patches allow for larger female parties among pygmy chimps
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