Logo du site
  • English
  • Français
  • Se connecter
Logo du site
  • English
  • Français
  • Se connecter
  1. Accueil
  2. Université de Neuchâtel
  3. Publications
  4. Responses to leopards are independent of experience in Guereza colobus monkeys
 
  • Details
Options
Vignette d'image

Responses to leopards are independent of experience in Guereza colobus monkeys

Auteur(s)
Schel, Anne Marijke
Zuberbühler, Klaus 
Institut de biologie 
In
Behaviour, Brill Academic Publishers, 2009/146/12/1709–1737
Mots-clés
  • <i>Colobus guereza</i>
  • predation
  • alarm call
  • leopard
  • predator experience
  • <i>Colobus guereza</i...

  • predation

  • alarm call

  • leopard

  • predator experience

Résumé
How primates learn to recognise the predatory species from their animate world is a largely unresolved problem. We conducted predator encounter experiments with wild Guereza colobus monkeys of the Sonso area of Budongo Forest, Uganda. The monkeys are hunted by crowned eagles and chimpanzees, but not leopards, which have been locally extinct for decades. Despite their unfamiliarity with this predator, monkeys reliably produced appropriate anti-predator behaviour to leopards, which was indistinguishable from that of a neighbouring population, where leopards are present. In both populations, monkeys produced the same vocal responses and predator-specific alarm calls, although leopard-naïve monkeys were more inclined to approach when hearing a leopard than monkeys that were familiar with this predator. Control experiments showed that the monkeys’ response pattern was not due to the effects of unfamiliarity or conspicuousness of the experimental stimuli. Natural selection appears to have endowed these primates with a cognitive capacity to recognise direct signs of leopard presence as inherently dangerous requiring specific anti-predator responses.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/5404
_
10.1163/000579509X12483520922007
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: Schel_A.-Response_Behaviour_2009.pdf (2.58 MB)
google-scholar
Présentation du portailGuide d'utilisationStratégie Open AccessDirective Open Access La recherche à l'UniNE Open Access ORCIDNouveautés

Service information scientifique & bibliothèques
Rue Emile-Argand 11
2000 Neuchâtel
contact.libra@unine.ch

Propulsé par DSpace, DSpace-CRIS & 4Science | v2022.02.00