| Literature DB >> 22509256 |
Kimberley J Hockings1, Matthew R McLennan.
Abstract
Crop-raiding is a major source of conflict between people and wildlife globally, impacting local livelihoods and impeding conservation. Conflict mitigation strategies that target problematic wildlife behaviours such as crop-raiding are notoriously difficult to develop for large-bodied, cognitively complex species. Many crop-raiders are generalist feeders. In more ecologically specialised species crop-type selection is not random and evidence-based management requires a good understanding of species' ecology and crop feeding habits. Comprehensive species-wide studies of crop consumption by endangered wildlife are lacking but are important for managing human-wildlife conflict. We conducted a comprehensive literature search of crop feeding records by wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), a ripe-fruit specialist. We assessed quantitatively patterns of crop selection in relation to species-specific feeding behaviour, agricultural exposure, and crop availability. Crop consumption by chimpanzees is widespread in tropical Africa. Chimpanzees were recorded to eat a considerable range of cultivars (51 plant parts from 36 species). Crop part selection reflected a species-typical preference for fruit. Crops widely distributed in chimpanzee range countries were eaten at more sites than sparsely distributed crops. We identified 'high' and 'low' conflict crops according to their attractiveness to chimpanzees, taking account of their importance as cash crops and/or staple foods to people. Most (86%) high conflict crops were fruits, compared to 13% of low conflict crops. Some widely farmed cash or staple crops were seldom or never eaten by chimpanzees. Information about which crops are most frequently consumed and which are ignored has enormous potential for aiding on-the-ground stakeholders (i.e. farmers, wildlife managers, and conservation and agricultural extension practitioners) develop sustainable wildlife management schemes for ecologically specialised and protected species in anthropogenic habitats. However, the economic and subsistence needs of local people, and the crop-raiding behaviour of sympatric wildlife, must be considered when assessing suitability of particular crops for conflict prevention and mitigation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22509256 PMCID: PMC3324475 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0033391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The flow of studies included in the analysis.
Figure 2Map showing the locations of sites where chimpanzees were recorded to consume cultivars.
Sites were classified as high, medium or low exposure to agriculture. Ten countries are represented: West Africa – Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Cote d'Ivoire; Central Africa – Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo; East Africa – Uganda, Rwanda, Tanzania. See Table 1 for site names. Nationwide surveys recorded chimpanzee crop feeding at multiple localities in Guinea-Bissau, Guinea and Cote d'Ivoire (dotted countries).
List of cultivars recorded in diets of wild chimpanzees and part(s) eaten.
| Crop | Part Eaten | Study Sites | No. Sites |
| Confirmed (Unconfirmed) | Confirmed (All records) | ||
| Avocado ( | F | (Bos, Bul) | 0 (2) |
| L | Bos | 1 | |
| Banana ( | F | Ben, Bos, Bul, Gom, Kib, Mah, Oko (Bil, Cad, Con, Gui, Hoi) | 7 (12) |
| P | Bos, Bul, Kib, Mah, Ner, Oko (Con) | 6 (7) | |
| L | Mah | 1 | |
| Un | (Dja, Ivo, Kah) | 0 (3) | |
| Butter bean ( | L | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
| S | (Bos) | 0 (1) | |
| Cantaloupe ( | F | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
| Cashew ( | F | Cad (Bos) | 1 (2) |
| Cassava ( | Fl | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
| T | Bos, Oko (Gui, Hoi, Yea) | 2 (5) | |
| Cocoa ( | F | Bos, Bul, Dja (Hoi, Ivo, Taï, Yea) | 3 (7) |
| Coconut ( | F | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
| Coffee ( | Un | (Ivo) | 0 (1) |
| Cow pea ( | S | Cad | 1 |
| Cucumber ( | Un | (Dja) | 0 (1) |
| Grapefruit ( | F | Bos, Sil | 2 |
| Guava ( | F | Bud, Bul, Mah (Bos, Cad) | 3 (5) |
| L | (Bos) | 0 (1) | |
| Jackfruit ( | F | Bul, Hoi | 2 |
| Lemon ( | F | Mah, Rub (Cad) | 2 (3) |
| Maize ( | F | Bos, Bud, Gui, Kib (Yea) | 4 (5) |
| P | Gis, Mah (Bul) | 2 (3) | |
| Un | (Bis, Hoi, Ivo, Kah) | 0 (4) | |
| Mandarin ( | F | Bos (Cad) | 1 (2) |
| Mango ( | F | Bos, Bud, Bul, Cad, Gom, Gui, Iss, Kas, Lop, Mah (Hoi, Kan) | 10 (12) |
| Millet (unknown sp.) | Un | (Gui, Sil) | 0 (2) |
| Okra ( | F | Bos | 1 |
| L | Bos | 1 | |
| Fl | Bos | 1 | |
| Orange ( | F | Bos, Bul, Cad, Gui (Yea) | 4 (5) |
| Papaya ( | F | Ben, Bil, Bos, Bud, Bul, Cad, Kas (Gui, Hoi, Ivo, Yea) | 7 (11) |
| P | Bos, Cad | 2 | |
| L | Bos, Cad | 2 | |
| B | Bos | 1 | |
| W | Bos | 1 | |
| Passion fruit ( | F | Bul, Kas, Kib | 3 |
| Peanut ( | S | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
| Pigeon pea ( | S | Mah (Bos) | 1 (2) |
| Pineapple ( | F | Bos (Bul, Gui, Hoi, Ivo, Yea) | 1 (6) |
| P | Bos | 1 | |
| Pumpkin ( | F | (Bos, Bul, Hoi) | 0 (3) |
| Rice ( | P | Bos (Ivo, Sil, Yea) | 1 (4) |
| Sorghum ( | P | Mah (Hoi) | 1 (2) |
| Soursop ( | F | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
| Sugarcane ( | P | Bil, Bos, Bud, Bul, Kas, Kib, Mah, Oko (Bis, Con, Gui, Hoi, Ivo) | 8 (13) |
| Sweet potato ( | T | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
| Tamarillo ( | F | Bul | 1 |
| Tea ( | Fl | (Gui) | 0 (1) |
| Tomato ( | F | (Bos, Bul) | 0 (2) |
| Yam ( | P | Bul | 1 |
| T | (Bos) | 0 (1) |
Part Eaten: F = fruit, P = pith, L = leaf, S = seed, Fl = flower, T = tuber, B = bark, W = wood, Un = unspecified;
Study Sites (+ = site record known or likely to concern ≥1 chimpanzee community; # = record is a nationwide survey comprising multiple localities): (a) Pan t. schweinfurthii: Ben = Beni [56], [57]; Bil = Bili-Uele [58]; Bud = Budongo [37]; Bul = Bulindi [41]; Con="East Congo” [59]; Gis = Gishwati [60]; Gom = Gombe [35]; Hoi = Hoima District [31]; Iss = Issa [61]; Kah = Kahuzi-Biega [62]; Kas = Kasokwa [63], [64]; Kib = Kibale [26], [65]; Mah = Mahale [34], [66]; (b) Pan t. troglodytes: Dja = Dja [67], [68]; Lop = Lópe [36]; Oko = Okorobikó Mtns [69]; (c) Pan t. verus: Bis = Guinea-Bissau# [70]; Bos = Bossou [30], [40]; Cad = Caiquene & Cadique [32]; Gui = Guinea# [44]; Ivo = Côte d'Ivoire# [43]; Kan = Kanfarande [71]; Ner = Nérébili [72]; Sil = Kanka Sili [29]; Taï = Taï [73]; Yea = Yeale, Mt Nimba (Granier, in [33]); Rub = Rubondo [74].
Sites at which the cultivar was confirmed eaten via direct observation, faecal analysis and/or feeding traces, are distinguished from unconfirmed sites at which consumption was recorded via local reports or an unspecified method. ‘All records’ is the sum of confirmed and unconfirmed sites.
Includes both plantain and sweet bananas.
Figure 3Profile of cultivated plant parts recorded eaten by chimpanzees.
The number of food items in each part category is shown as a percentage of all confirmed (black bars, n = 34) and unconfirmed (grey bars, n = 17) cultivated food items. The proportion of confirmed and unconfirmed crop foods per category is uncorrelated (Spearman's rank correlation: rs = 0.074, n = 9, p = 0.85).
Figure 4Parallels between crop consumption and wild food consumption.
Relationship between the percentage of confirmed crop foods in different plant part categories and mean percentage per category of all plant foods at 10 chimpanzee study sites. ‘Other’ plant parts include resin, tuber and wood.
Cultivars most commonly recorded eaten by chimpanzees.
| Crop | Part Eaten | No. Sites (n = 27) | % Sites |
| Confirmed (All records) | |||
| Mango | Fruit | 10 (12) | 37.0–44.4% |
| Banana | Fruit, Pith | 8 (16) | 29.6–59.3% |
| Sugarcane | Pith | 8 (13) | 29.6–48.1% |
| Papaya | Fruit | 7 (11) | 25.9–40.1% |
| Maize | Fruit, Pith | 6 (12) | 22.2–44.4% |
| Cocoa | Fruit | 3 (7) | 11.1–25.9% |
Crops listed are those recorded eaten at ≥25% of sites.
Banana fruit- and pith-eating, and maize fruit- and pith-eating, were not distinguished because part(s) eaten was not specified in some reports. For these crops the number of site records for each specified part is shown in Table 1.
Percentage ranges indicate the % sites at which each crop was confirmed eaten (lower value) and recorded eaten (confirmed and unconfirmed combined: higher value).
Figure 5An adult male chimpanzee at Bossou in Guinea feeding on banana fruit.