| Literature DB >> 20949115 |
Mojca Stojan-Dolar, Eckhard W Heymann.
Abstract
Many animals interrupt their moving with brief pauses, which appear to serve several different functions. We examined the function of such intermittent locomotion in wild living mustached tamarins (Saguinus mystax), small arboreal New World primates that form mixed-species groups with saddleback tamarins (Saguinus fuscicollis). We investigated how different environmental and social factors affect pausing during locomotion and used these data to infer the function of this behavior. As measures of intermittent locomotion, we used percentage of time spent pausing and pause rate. We considered 3 possible functions that are not mutually exclusive: increased endurance, route planning, and antipredator vigilance. Mustached tamarins spent on average (mean ± SE) 55.1 ± 1.0% of time pausing, which makes effective resource exploitation more time consuming and needs to be outweighed by correspondingly large benefits. Percentage of time spent pausing decreased in larger mixed-species groups vs. smaller mixed-species groups and decreased with height and in monkeys carrying infants. It was not affected by sex, age, spatial arrangement, or single-species group size. Pause rate increased in individuals traveling independently compared to those traveling in file, but was not affected by other factors. The group size effect in mixed-species groups lends support to the notion that pausing during locomotion is an antipredator tactic that can be reduced in the increased safety of larger groups, but other results suggest that additional functions, particularly route planning, are also of great importance. Benefits in terms of predator confusion and group movement coordination are also likely to play a role and remain a topic for further research.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20949115 PMCID: PMC2945470 DOI: 10.1007/s10764-010-9421-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Primatol ISSN: 0164-0291 Impact factor: 2.264
Predictions about how different factors would affect pausing during locomotion assuming different predominant functions of this behavior and results of GLMM for the effect of different factors on 2 measures of intermittent locomotion: the percentage spent pausing and on pause rate
| Factor | Predictions | % time pausing | Pause rate | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increase endurance (E) | Plan the path (P) | Vigilance (V) | Statistics | Effect | Statistics | Effect | Possible Function | |
| Site | No effect | EBQB > PI | EBQB > PI |
| No effect | F(1,341) = 3.2 | No effect | E |
|
|
| |||||||
| Spatial arrangement | No effect | Independent > in file | ? |
| No effect | F(4,340) = 10.7 | Independent > in file | P |
|
|
| |||||||
| Single-species group size | No effect | No effect | No effect |
| No effect | F(3,195) = 1.5 | No effect | E, P, V |
|
|
| |||||||
| Mixed-species group size | No effect | No effect | Decrease |
| Decrease | F(3,130) = 0.5 | No effect | V |
|
|
| |||||||
| Sex | No effect | No effect | Males > females |
| No effect | F(1,32) = 0.1 | No effect | E, P |
|
|
| |||||||
| Age | Juveniles > adults | Juveniles > adults | No effect |
| No effect | F(2,58) = 0.4 | No effect | V |
|
|
| |||||||
| Carrying infants | Carriers > non-carriers | Carriers > non-carriers | Carriers > non-carriers |
| Non-carriers > carriers | F(1,329) = 0.6 | No effect | ? |
|
|
| |||||||
| Height | No effect | Decrease | First decrease, then increase |
| Decrease | F(4,193) = 1.2 | No effect | P, V |
|
|
| |||||||
“Possible function” refers to which hypotheses about the function of intermittent locomotion the results accord with. In cases when one measure of intermittent locomotion showed no effect but the other measure was affected by that factor, we assumed possible function based on the statistically significant result
Data sets used for analyses of effects of different factors on intermittent locomotion
| Factor | Data used | Number (%) of observations | No. individuals | No. of groups |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Site | All | 343 (100%) | 36 | 5 |
| Spatial arrangement | All | 343 (100%) | 36 | 5 |
| Group size in SSG | Only Padre Isla | 199 (58%) | 18 | 2 |
| Total MSG group size | Only MSG at Quebrada Blanco | 126 (37%) | 14 | 3 |
| Sex | Adults only | 205 (60%) | 23 | 5 |
| Age | Only observations when individuals were not traveling in file | 174 (51%) | 29 | 5 |
| Carrying infants | Only when infants <3 mo present in the group | 198 (58%) | 33 | 5 |
| Height | All | 343 (100%) | 36 | 5 |
Fig. 1Factors affecting the percentage of time spent pausing. Graphs represent the effect of (a) total mixed-species group size; (b) carrying infants; and (c) height of the focal individual. Only statistically significant (p < 0,05) effects are shown. Error bars represent SE. The asterisks indicate which Bonferroni pairwise comparisons rendered significant differences.
Fig. 2Effect of spatial arrangement on pause rate. Other factors did not have a significant (p < 0,05) effect on the frequency of pausing. Error bars represent SE.