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Food transfers in wild and reintroduced golden lion tamarins, Leontopithecus rosalia

✍ Scribed by Carlos R. Ruiz-Miranda; Devra G. Kleiman; James M. Dietz; Ezequiel Moraes; Adriana D. Grativol; Andrew J. Baker; Benjamin B. Beck


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
136 KB
Volume
48
Category
Article
ISSN
0275-2565

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✦ Synopsis


We collected data from wild and reintroduced golden lion tamarins (Leontopithecus rosalia) to describe the behavior of donor and recipient during food transfers, evaluate the effect of supplemental feeding on food transfer behavior, and examine various hypotheses concerning the function of food transfers in primates. Behavioral observations were conducted on 12 groups of tamarins with young (N = 30) between the ages of 1 week and 1 year old. Results show that food transfers involve various behaviors, from steals by recipients to offers by donors; transfers mostly derive from adults and are directed at immature weaned young (between 3 and 9 months old); and that most items transferred were prey or fruits that require skill to process. Eleven percent of food transfers were preceded by an adult vocalization specific to that context, whereas 86% were preceded by conspicuous infant vocalizations and begging behavior. The most common vocalizations were loud and atonal (rasps) and broad banded frequency modulated (trills). Infants born to reintroduced parents vocalized less, whereas reintroduced adults vocalized more before transferring food than their wild counterparts. Reintroduced adults and young received more food transfers (4.4 per


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