| Literature DB >> 34845236 |
Alexander M Milner1,2, Susanna A Wood3, Catherine Docherty4,5, Laura Biessy3, Masaki Takenaka6, Koji Tojo7.
Abstract
The Japanese macaque (Macaca fuscata) is native to the main islands of Japan, except Hokkaido, and is the most northerly living non-human primate. In the Chubu Sangaku National Park of the Japanese Alps, macaques live in one of the coldest areas of the world, with snow cover limiting the availability of preferred food sources. Winter is typically a bottleneck for food availability potentially resulting in marked energy deficits, and mortality may result from famine. However, streams with groundwater upwelling flow during the winter with a constant water temperature of about 5 °C are easily accessible for Japanese macaques to search for riverine biota. We used metabarcoding (Cytochrome c oxidase I) of fecal samples from Japanese macaques to determine their wintertime diet. Here we provide the first robust evidence that Japanese macaques feed on freshwater biota, including brown trout, riverine insects and molluscs, in Chubu Sangaku National Park. These additional food sources likely aid their winter survival.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34845236 PMCID: PMC8629975 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-01972-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Presence (coloured) or absence (white) of freshwater organisms (at the order level) in the fecal samples of Japanese macaques collected near the Azusa River in Kamikochi (Chubu Sangaku National Park), Japan.
BLAST results from freshwater chordates, molluscs and aquatic arthropods (or arthropods having aquatic life stages) sequences identified in the fecal samples of Japanese macaques.
| Phylum | Class | Order | Family | Genus/species | % similarity | % coverage | Number of reads |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chordata | Actinopterygii | Salmoniformes | Salmonidae | 100 | 100 | 2,745 | |
| Mollusca | Gastropoda | Littorinimorpha | Tateidae | 99.7 | 100 | 16,103 | |
| Gastropoda | Pleuroceridae | Semisulcospiridae | 100 | 100 | 179 | ||
| Arthropoda | Hexanauplia | Cyclopoida | Cyclopidae | 99.7 | 100 | 6,842 | |
| Insecta | Plecoptera | Nemouridae | 98.7 | 100 | 6 | ||
| Insecta | Diptera | Tipulidae | 94.9 | 100 | 440 | ||
| Insecta | Diptera | Chironomidae | 93.2 | 100 | 203 | ||
| Insecta | Plecoptera | Chloroperlidae | 90.6 | 100 | 61 | ||
| Insecta | Diptera | Dixidae | 90.4 | 100 | 6 | ||
| Insecta | Diptera | Chironomidae | 87.5 | 100 | 2,547 |
% similarity = percentage of similarity between the sequences found in the fecal samples and the sequences in the GenBank database; % coverage = percentage of the sequence found in our sample aligned to a sequence in GenBank; number of reads = number of times that same sequence occurred in the samples.
Figure 1Winter air temperature at the Kamikochi study site during the period 2017 to 2019.