What is the most important parameter of underlying behavioural and ecological differences among living primates?
Diet
What is a primates diet requirements?
Carbohydrates
Amino acids (proteins)
Fats and oils
Vitamins, minerals
Water
What should primates avoid in their diet?
Toxins such as:
Adults leaves
Caffeine
Tannins
Alkaloids
Plant evolution strategies
Developing toxins to prevent primates from eating them
Theories on food as a selective pressure
Satisfying nutritional requirements
Maximize nutrition gain
Satisfying nutritional requirement
Getting enough nutrients to get by
Wanting to maintain condition, immune system etc.
Maximize nutritional gain
Minimize cost and maximize reward for foraging strategies
Move as little as possible to get as many calories as possible
Maximize net energy and fitness
Micronutrients
Dietary imbalance
Ex. Scurvy
Optimal foraging
Foraging behaviours based on intrinsic properties of potential foods
Ex. Nutritional quality, time/energy to find and harvest
Maximization of optimal foraging
Amount of food
Quality of food
Minimization of optimal foraging
Travel/search time
Processing
Digestion
Competition
Captivity primates food supply
Have more food and are able to produce more babies
Will have similar illness as humans (ex. Scurvy)
Ex. Provision baboons will grow faster and reach sexual maturity earlier
Wild primates food supply
Their food is limited
Have to strategize how to maximize return and minimize cost which if favoured by selection
Basal metabolic rate
The body’s resting rate of energy output
Active metabolism
Amount of energy expressed in calories that is needed for physical activity
Growth rate
Energy needed to be able to reach maturity/adult
Reproductive efforts
Energy needed to reproduce
17%-30% extra cost for lactating females
4 factors to determine how much food is required in a primates diet
basal metabolic
Active metabolism
Growth rate
Reproductive effort
What is the relationship between body mass and quality of diet?
The higher the body mass, the lower need for quality food
Can survive on a poor quality diet
Ex. Gorillas (eating leaves and vegetation)
Smaller/tiny animals cannot have low quality diets
Ex. Bushbabies and tarsiers (insects)
Wild Bananas
Low pulp to seed ratio
Pulp is dry, fibrous or strong tasting
Usually avoided
Human Bananas
All pulp and sugar
Highly digestible
Infinite pulp to seed ratio
Perfect!
Digestive adaption to frugivory
Large, broad incisors
Low cusped, relatively flat molars
Large (unspecialized) digestive system
Frugivory
Fruit eating
Leaves
Foliage (leaves and stems)
Main fallback food for frugivorous primates
Rich in protein, but also contains toxins
Digestive adaptions for Folivores
Large body size
Small incisors
Sharp shearing crests on molars (to cut the leaves)
Large, well developed digestive systems
Folivores
Leaf eating
Colobus
Have another stomach to ferment the leaves to help digestion
Geladas
Adapted incisor teeth to make digestion the leaves easier
Colobines
Preferred food are leaves
Gorillas
Get a lot of their protein from leaves
Fibre
Protect foliage by reducing digestibility, difficult to chew
Humans leave much less fibre than apes and monkeys
Ex. Hunter gathers (5-10% fibre diet) vs chimpanzees (30-35% fibre diet)
Seeds
Rich in lipids and proteins
Protected by hard shells, toxins or both
Require thick molars to eat to protect cracks from forming in your teeth
Specialization needed to crack nuts
Insects
Rich in lipids and proteins
Easy to digest
Hard to catch
Digestive adaptation for insects
Large canines
Sharp cusps
Tarsier
The most insectivorous of primates
No plant food diet
Have high cusped (pointy) molars for slicing prey
Aye aye
Huge incisors for gnawing wood (to get to larvae under the bark)
Chimpanzee diet
Kibale forest, Uganda
Preferred food: Ripe fruits are eaten in proportion to availability
Fallback food: Foliage
Eastern chimpanzees and Gorillas
Preferred: Fruits
Fallback: Fibrous food
Live sympatrically
Eat similar amounts of food
Liem’s Paradox
Species often prefer not to eat the food to which they are specifically adapted to
Ex. Gorillas have big guts and chewing muscles better for eating leaves, but prefer fruit
Sympatric
Living in the same place
Ex. Chimpanzees and gorillas
Niche differentiation is ______ when food is abundant
Not obvious
Ex. When food supply in scares, chimpanzees seek fruit while gorillas seek leaves
Feeding adaptation
Tends to be developed for eat fallback food
Solution to Liem’s Paradox
Look at the time of the year when food is most limited to view individual variation and RS
Female foraging strategies
To maximize their reproductive success
How does female foraging strategies work with males maximizing reproductive success?
Socio Ecological Model
Competition
Reduce feeding efficiency due to the pressure of other individuals
Scramble competition
Occurs when increasing group size results in less food for every individual
Ex. Piñata, there are a lot of small pieces that are not worth individually fighting for. Success is by collected a lot of pieces (maximize foraging efficiency)
Contest competition
Dominants get access to food over subordinates
Ex. Items are quite large and individuals will form teams to monopolize the resources. Success depends on fighting ability, dominance and status
Ecological Constrains Model
Optimization group size hypothesis
Is group size optimal?
Group size in Geladas