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Enclosure environment affects the activity budgets of captive Japanese macaques (<i>Macaca fuscata</i>)

Author Affiliations
University of Dhaka, Kyoto University
Published InAmerican Journal of Primatology
Year2008
Citations66

Abstract

Individuals adapt to changes in their environment, such as food availability and temperature, by adjusting the amount of time spent in different behavioral activities. These adjustments in behavior should vary across age-sex class according to specific physiological and social needs. We studied the activity budgets of three social Japanese macaque groups inhabiting either vegetated or nonvegetated enclosures in order to compare the effects of access with vegetation, as both food and substrate on resting, feeding, grooming and moving activities over a 12-month period. Daily access to natural foods for monkeys in the vegetated enclosure seems to be largely responsible for the differences in daily time budgets of these three groups. Resting time in all three groups was longer than the…
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