Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea
This study was carried out in the Sabaringo forest outside the Masai Mara National Reserve in Kenya in order to obtain knowledge about the dietary preferences of the blue monkey Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni. Previous studies of foraging behaviour of lactating and non-lactating females in this fore...
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| Formato: | L3 |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés sueco |
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SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231)
2008
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| Materias: |
| _version_ | 1855571750439354368 |
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| author | Kempe, Vendela |
| author_browse | Kempe, Vendela |
| author_facet | Kempe, Vendela |
| author_sort | Kempe, Vendela |
| collection | Epsilon Archive for Student Projects |
| description | This study was carried out in the Sabaringo forest outside the Masai Mara National Reserve in Kenya in order to obtain knowledge about the dietary preferences of the blue monkey Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni. Previous studies of foraging behaviour of lactating and non-lactating females in this forest have investigated the monkeys' preferences of tree species to foraging of and being positioned in. To relate the monkeys' preferences of each tree species to the abundance of the tree species we made a total inventory of the trees in the forest. This was done by identifying species and size of each tree, as well as GPS position in order to create maps of the area. For the ten most popular tree species displayed in the previous study, comparisons were then made between the monkeys' use of the species and the abundance of these species (measured by number of trees, number of branches and stem area). The observations displayed in this thesis are based on the analysis of five of the ten most popular tree species; Diospyros abyssinica (Giant Diospyros), Euclea divinorum (Diamond-leaved Euclea), Turraea robusta (Honeysuckle tree), Warburgia ugandensis (East African Greenheart) and Ficus lutea (Giant-leaved Fig). The remaining five tree species are analysed in a corresponding thesis by Ahlbäck.
F. lutea was despite of its low frequency in the area the clearly most popular tree species, mainly for foraging of but also for being positioned in. It was used 28 times its abundance for foraging and 10.2 times its abundance for positioning, concerning its number of trees. Both lactating and non-lactating females showed this preference, even though the trend was stronger among the latter. The second most popular tree species for foraging was W. Ugandensis and D. Abyssinica. Both E. divinorum and T. robusta were utilized for foraging with same or less frequency than their abundance. When looking at the tree species used for positioning, the most popular species after F. lutea was W. Ugandensis, E. divinorum and D. abyssinica. The least popular species was T. robusta. |
| format | L3 |
| id | RepoSLU10779 |
| institution | Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences |
| language | Inglés swe |
| publishDate | 2008 |
| publishDateSort | 2008 |
| publisher | SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) |
| publisherStr | SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) |
| record_format | eprints |
| spelling | RepoSLU107792017-09-13T09:38:52Z Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea Blå markattors utnyttjande av fem trädarter i relation till varje trädarts förekomst : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis och Ficus lutea Kempe, Vendela Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni lactating females Diospyros abyssinica Euclea divinorum Turraea robusta Warburgia ugandensis Ficus lutea tree abundance foraging positioning This study was carried out in the Sabaringo forest outside the Masai Mara National Reserve in Kenya in order to obtain knowledge about the dietary preferences of the blue monkey Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni. Previous studies of foraging behaviour of lactating and non-lactating females in this forest have investigated the monkeys' preferences of tree species to foraging of and being positioned in. To relate the monkeys' preferences of each tree species to the abundance of the tree species we made a total inventory of the trees in the forest. This was done by identifying species and size of each tree, as well as GPS position in order to create maps of the area. For the ten most popular tree species displayed in the previous study, comparisons were then made between the monkeys' use of the species and the abundance of these species (measured by number of trees, number of branches and stem area). The observations displayed in this thesis are based on the analysis of five of the ten most popular tree species; Diospyros abyssinica (Giant Diospyros), Euclea divinorum (Diamond-leaved Euclea), Turraea robusta (Honeysuckle tree), Warburgia ugandensis (East African Greenheart) and Ficus lutea (Giant-leaved Fig). The remaining five tree species are analysed in a corresponding thesis by Ahlbäck. F. lutea was despite of its low frequency in the area the clearly most popular tree species, mainly for foraging of but also for being positioned in. It was used 28 times its abundance for foraging and 10.2 times its abundance for positioning, concerning its number of trees. Both lactating and non-lactating females showed this preference, even though the trend was stronger among the latter. The second most popular tree species for foraging was W. Ugandensis and D. Abyssinica. Both E. divinorum and T. robusta were utilized for foraging with same or less frequency than their abundance. When looking at the tree species used for positioning, the most popular species after F. lutea was W. Ugandensis, E. divinorum and D. abyssinica. The least popular species was T. robusta. Denna studie gjordes i Sabaringoskogen utanför Masai Mara National Reserve i Kenya med syfte att undersöka födopreferenserna hos den blå markattan Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni. Artens användning av trädarterna som föda och för att vistas i hade tidigare studerats hos lakterande och icke-lakterande honor i samma område. För att förstå apornas preferenser gällande trädarter att äta respektive vistas i genomförde vi en totalinventering av trädarterna i området. Detta gjordes genom att bestämma art och storlek för varje träd, samt även GPS-position för att kunna göra kartor över området. Jämförelser gjordes sedan för de tio populäraste trädarterna i den tidigare studien, gällande apornas användning av arterna samt arternas förekomst (mätt som antal träd, antal grenar och stamarea). Observationerna i denna uppsats bygger på analyser av fem av de tio populäraste trädarterna; Diospyros abyssinica (Giant Diospyros), Euclea divinorum (Diamond-leaved Euclea), Turraea robusta (Honeysuckle tree), Warburgia ugandensis (East African Greenheart) och Ficus lutea (Giant-leaved Fig). Användningen av de resterande fem analyseras i en motsvarande uppsats av Ahlbäck. Trots dess låga förekomst i området var F. lutea den klart populäraste trädarten, främst vad gäller att äta i men även att vistas i. Arten användes 28 gånger sin förekomst för att äta i och 10,2 gånger sin förekomst för att vistas i, gällande dess antal träd. Denna preferens delades av både lakterande och icke-lakterande honor, men trenden var tydligare bland de senare. De näst populäraste trädarterna att äta i var W. Ugandensis och D. abyssinica. Både E. divinorum och T. robusta användes i samma eller mindre utsträckning för att äta i än de förekom. Vad gäller användningen av trädarterna för att sitta i var W. Ugandensis, E. divinorum och D. abyssinica, efter F. lutea, populärast. Den minst populära arten var T. robusta. SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) 2008 L3 eng swe https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10779/ |
| spellingShingle | Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni lactating females Diospyros abyssinica Euclea divinorum Turraea robusta Warburgia ugandensis Ficus lutea tree abundance foraging positioning Kempe, Vendela Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea |
| title | Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea |
| title_full | Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea |
| title_fullStr | Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea |
| title_full_unstemmed | Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea |
| title_short | Blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : Diospyros abyssinica, Euclea divinorum, Turraea robusta, Warburgia ugandensis and Ficus lutea |
| title_sort | blue monkeys' utilization of five tree species in relation to abundance of each tree species : diospyros abyssinica, euclea divinorum, turraea robusta, warburgia ugandensis and ficus lutea |
| topic | Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni lactating females Diospyros abyssinica Euclea divinorum Turraea robusta Warburgia ugandensis Ficus lutea tree abundance foraging positioning |