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Orangutan activity budgets: Monthly variations and the effects of body size, parturition, and sociality

โœ Scribed by John C. Mitani


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1989
Tongue
English
Weight
940 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0275-2565

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โœฆ Synopsis


The activity budgets of individual orangutans were investigated at the Kutai Reserve, Indonesia. Activity profiles within and between individuals were compared to examine monthly variations in feeding patterns, potential energetic constraints imposed by large body size and parturition, and the costs of sociality. Animals showed monthly changes in travelling, feeding, and resting patterns. Monthly increases in travelling and feeding were associated with marked reductions in the time spent resting. Interindividual variations in activity budgets did not exist among animals of the same age-sex class. Activity patterns differed, however, as a function of age and sex. Adult females and subadult males travelled and fed significantly longer than an adult male. Parturition had predictable effects on activity; one female reduced her feeding and travelling immediately following parturition. Adult male orangutan sociality appears to be limited by travel costs. Associations with females forced a male orangutan to travel significantly more compared with periods in which he was solitary. The male did not lose an appreciable amount of time feeding when accompanying a female.


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