학술논문

Interactions with humans impose time constraints on urban-dwelling rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta).
Document Type
Article
Source
Behaviour. 2019, Vol. 156 Issue 12, p1255-1282. 28p.
Subject
*RHESUS monkeys
*SOCIAL interaction
*MACAQUES
*HUMAN-animal relationships
*TIME management
Language
ISSN
0005-7959
Abstract
Time is a valuable but limited resource, and animals' survival depends on their ability to carefully manage the amount of time they allocate to each daily activity. While existing research has examined the ecological factors affecting animals' activity budgets, the impact of anthropogenic factors on urban-dwelling animals' time budgets remains understudied. Here we collected data through focal animal sampling from three groups of rhesus macaques in Northern India to examine whether interactions with humans decrease macaques' resting and social time (time constraints hypothesis), or whether, by contrast, foraging on anthropogenic food, that is potentially high in calories, leads macaques to spend more time resting and in social interactions (free time hypothesis). We found that macaques who interacted more frequently with people spent significantly less time resting and grooming, supporting the time constraints hypothesis. We argue that these time constraints are likely caused by the unpredictability of human behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]