| Literature DB >> 26487312 |
Lissa Ongman1, Christelle Colin2,3, Estelle Raballand4,5, Tatyana Humle6.
Abstract
To date few studies, especially among non-human primates, have evaluated or monitored rehabilitation effectiveness and identified key species-specific behavioral indicators for release success. This four-months study aimed to identify behavioral indicators of rehabilitation success among ten infant and juvenile orphaned chimpanzees cared for in peer groups at the Centre for Conservation of Chimpanzees (CCC), Guinea, West Africa. Behavioral data focused on foraging skills and activity budget. During bush-outings, rehabilitants spent on average nearly a quarter of their activity budget foraging, resting or traveling, respectively. Neither age, sex, the level of abnormal behaviors demonstrated upon arrival nor human contact during bush-outings predicted individual dietary knowledge. However, individuals who spent more time arboreal demonstrated a greater dietary breadth than conspecifics who dwelled more terrestrially. Although our data failed to demonstrate a role of conspecific observation in dietary acquisition, we propose that the mingling of individuals from different geographical origins may act as a catalyst for acquiring new dietary knowledge, promoted by ecological opportunities offered during bush-outings. This "Super Chimpanzee" theory opens up new questions about cultural transmission and socially-biased learning among our closest living relatives and provides a novel outlook on rehabilitation in chimpanzees.Entities:
Keywords: abnormal behaviors; bush-outings; chimpanzee; rehabilitation; reintroduction; sanctuary; socially-biased learning
Year: 2013 PMID: 26487312 PMCID: PMC4495513 DOI: 10.3390/ani3010109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1Map of the location of the Haut Niger National Park (HNNP) in Guinea, West Africa, highlighting the Mafou core area of the park and the relative location of the sanctuary in Somoria (adapted from [33]).
Summary of each subject’s sex, year of birth (YOB), current age (as of January 2012), age upon arrival to the Centre for Conservation of Chimpanzees (CCC), the number of years spent at sanctuary (as of January 2012), and average abnormal behavior likert-scale [35] score upon arrival (ABS).
| Name | Sex | YOB | Group | Arrival Date (month/year) | Age of Individual (years) | Age at arrival (years) | Years at sanctuary | ABS ± 1SD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 2004 | Nursery | 04/06 | 8 | 2 | 6 | 0 ± 0.0 | |
| Female | 2006 | Nursery | 05/08 | 6 | 2 | 4 | 1.6 ± 0.5 | |
| Male | 2006 | Nursery | 05/08 | 6 | 2 | 4 | 2.2 ± 0.4 | |
| Female | 2005 | Nursery | 03/07 | 7 | 2 | 5 | 0 ± 0.0 | |
| Female | 2005 | Nursery | 08/07 | 7 | 2 | 5 | 0.75 ± 0.5 | |
| Male | 2006 | Nursery | 06/07 | 6 | 1 | 5 | 0.25 ± 0.5 | |
| Male | 2005 | Nursery | 09/06 | 8 | 1 | 7 | 0.25 ± 0.5 | |
| male | 2009 | TDT | 06/10 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 0.2 ± 0.4 | |
| Female | 2010 | TDT | 01/11 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0.25 ± 0.5 | |
| Female | 2007 | TDT | 03/11 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 ± 0.0 |
Summary of scale used to quantify the degree of aberrant or stereotypic behaviors exhibited by each orphan upon arrival at the sanctuary. Experienced keepers, staff members and long-term volunteers who were present at the time were asked to score each chimpanzee independently. The final score for each individual was averaged based on a minimum of five scorers.
| Likert Scale | Scale definition |
|---|---|
| Exhibits a range of abnormal behaviors, | |
| Exhibits abnormal behaviors occasionally under stressful and less stressful conditions, e.g., rocking, on a daily basis. Abnormal behaviors seen several times a day. | |
| Exhibits abnormal behaviors on occasion and only under stressful situations. Abnormal behaviors observed no more than once a day. | |
| No abnormal behaviors |
Ethogram for data collection categories. All categories were recorded during focal follows, including behavior, location and human contact.
| CATEGORIES | Definition |
|---|---|
| An individual is engaged in social play or allo-grooming with humans or conspecifics. This category also includes rarely observed social sexual events. | |
| Individual eating a food item | |
| An individual actively searching for food (may be collecting seed pods or fruit). | |
| The use of an object, e.g., stick or stalk of vegetation, to probe or explore an opening, including termite mound holes, ground holes, or cracks. This behavioral category also included the use of a solid object to strike another to access potentially an embedded edible resource. | |
| Time spent self-grooming, playing alone or with an object, and solitary sexual events such as masturbation | |
| Individual maintains gaze directed towards keeper or conspecific group member. Who is observed and their activity is also recorded. Gaze must be maintained for longer than 3 seconds and within 3 meters of the individual being observed. | |
| Manipulation of branches and/or terrestrial herbaceous vegetation (THV) with the purpose to construct or modify a nesting structure either for resting or play. | |
| Locomotion on the ground or in an arboreal setting (excludes individual displacement when actively searching for food—see above). | |
| The individual is sleeping, standing or sitting and is not actively playing, grooming or partaking in any social behavior stated above, including not actively feeding, foraging, tool using or observing. | |
| Location of chimpanzee is in a tree or a vine, | |
| Location of chimpanzee is at ground level. | |
| Individual is in direct physical contact with a human caretaker. | |
| Individual is not in direct physical contact with a human caretaker. |
Plants and insects or insect products consumed during bush-outings by the “TDT” and “Nursery” groups between January 28–May 18 2012. Data includes species, family and part of plant eaten (THV: terrestrial herbaceous vegetation).
| No. | Species | Family | Type of Plant | Part eaten |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bombacaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Caesalpinioideae | Tree | honey on leaves | ||
| Sapindaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Poaceae | Grass | leaf | ||
| Bombacaceae | Tree | flower, leaf | ||
| Caesalpinioideae | Tree | seed | ||
| Meliaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Sterculiaceae | Tree | flower, leaf stem, fruit, bark | ||
| Boraginaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Zingiberaceae | THV | stalk | ||
| Caesalpinioideae | Tree | flower, seeds, new leaf | ||
| Caesalpinioideae | Tree | fruit, bark | ||
| Caesalpinioideae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Ebenaceae | Tree | fruit, new leaf | ||
| Dioscoreaceae | Vine | leaf | ||
| Moraceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Moraceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Moraceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Rubiaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Simaroubaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Meliaceae | Tree | leaf, leaf stem | ||
| Bignoniaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Apocynaceae | Vine | bark, fruit, leaf | ||
| Anacardiaceae | Tree | seed | ||
| Anacardiaceae | Tree | leaf, bark | ||
| Anacardiaceae | Tree | leaf, fruit | ||
| Marantaceae | THV | stalk | ||
| Opilianaceae | Vine | bark, leaf | ||
| Poaceae | Grass | stalk | ||
| Mimosaceae | Tree | flower, fruit | ||
| Caesalpinioideae | Tree | seed | ||
| Fabaceae | Tree | flower, new leaf | ||
| Fabaceae | Tree | flower | ||
| Fabaceae | Tree | flower | ||
| Arecaceae | Tree | stalk | ||
| Apocynaceae | Vine | fruit | ||
| Apocynaceae | Vine | fruit | ||
| Zingiberaceae | THV | root, flower | ||
| Smilaceae | Vine | new leaf | ||
| Caesalpinioideae | Tree | bark | ||
| Euphorbiaceae | Tree | fruit | ||
| Olacaceae | Shrub | fruit | ||
| Annonaceae | Tree | seed | ||
| Formicidae | Insect | ant | ||
| Termitidae | Insect | termite | ||
| Apidae | Honey | honey |
Figure 2Mean individual percentage of time spent (±1 SE) across the nine main behavioral categories recorded during continuous focal follows.
Figure 3Percentage of food parts consumed (n = 63) during bush-outings during the four-month study period.