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タイトル: Fallback Foods of Red Leaf Monkeys (Presbytis rubicunda) in Danum Valley, Borneo
著者: Hanya, Goro  kyouindb  KAKEN_id  orcid https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8612-659X (unconfirmed)
Bernard, Henry
著者名の別形: 半谷, 吾郎
キーワード: Diet
Fallback foods
Functional response
General flowering
Spatholobus macropterus
発行日: Apr-2012
出版者: Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
誌名: International Journal of Primatology
巻: 33
号: 2
開始ページ: 322
終了ページ: 337
抄録: Animals in Southeast Asia must cope with long periods of fruit scarcity of unpredictable duration between irregular mast fruiting events. Long-term data are necessary to examine the effect of mast fruiting on diet, and particularly on the selection of fallback foods during periods of fruit scarcity. No such data is available for colobine monkeys, which may consume substantial amounts of fruits and seeds when available. We studied the diet of red leaf monkeys (Presbytis rubicunda, Colobinae) in Danum Valley, Sabah, northern Borneo, using 25 mo of behavioral observation, phenology and vegetation surveys, and chemical analysis to compare leaves eaten with nonfood leaves. The monkeys spent 46% of their feeding time on young leaves, 38% on seeds, 12% on whole fruits, 2.0% on flowers, 1.0% on bark, and 1.2% on pith. They spent more time feeding on seeds and whole fruit when fruit availability was high and fed on young leaves of Spatholobus macropterus (liana, Leguminosae) as fallback foods. This species was by far the most important food, constituting 27.9% of the total feeding time, and the feeding time on this species negatively correlated with fruit availability. Consumed leaves contained more protein than nonconsumed leaves, and variation in time spent feeding on different leaves was explained by their abundance. These results suggest that red leaf monkeys show essentially the same response to the supra-annual increase in fruit availability as sympatric monogastric primates, increasing their seed and whole-fruit consumption. However, they depended more on young leaves, in particular Spatholobus macropterus, as fallback foods during fruit-scarce periods than did gibbons or orangutans. Their selection of fallback food appeared to be due to both nutrition and abundance.
著作権等: The final publication is available at www.springerlink.com
この論文は著者最終稿です。内容が印刷版と異なることがありますので、引用の際には出版社版をご確認ご利用ください。This is the Accepted Author Manuscript. Please cite only the published version.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2433/154842
DOI(出版社版): 10.1007/s10764-012-9580-9
出現コレクション:学術雑誌掲載論文等

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