Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T16:05:51.708Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Structure and spatial organization of an Amazonian terra firme forest primate community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Carlos A. Peres
Affiliation:
Museu Goeldi, Departamento de Zoologia, Cx. Postal 399, Belém – Pará, Brazil, and Sub-Dept. of Veterinary Anatomy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1QS, UK

Abstract

A high-diversity primate community consisting of 13 species was examined at an entirely undisturbed and remote terra firme forest near the headwaters of the Urucu River, Amazonas, Brazil. Twelve of these species used a 900-ha study plot, located 4 km or more inland from the river, and comprised a total group density of 16 groups km−2, an overall density of 146 individuals km−2, a crude community biomass of 381 kg km−2, and a metabolic biomass of 278 kg0.75 km−2. These species were occasionally found together within small (≥1 km2) areas of forest, so long as they included the full complement of available forest types. More frequently, however, only half the species co-occurred in a single habitat type at any one time, reflecting a relatively consistent pattern of subcommunity spatial organization. Habitat generalist species making extensive, yearround use of the predominant habitat type (high forest), were common, whereas habitat specialists were uncommon to very rare, and confined to minor habitats. Those species coexisting throughout the year in high forest were found to segregate vertically from one another. These and other modal patterns of community structure were disrupted seasonally by long-distance, inland movements by two ‘igapó’ forest species living in large groups – squirrel monkeys and white-face capuchins – to high forest areas, which apparently resulted from a food bottleneck in their habitat. Another species found in large groups – woolly monkeys – also exercised seasonally vagrant movements within the high forest matrix, which coincided with periods of greatest scarcity of mature fleshy fruits.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

Altmann, J. 1974. Observational study of behavior: sampling methods. Behaviour 49:227267.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ayres, J. M. 1981. Observações sobre a Ecologia e o Comportamento dos Cuxíus (Chiropotes albinasus e Chiropotes satanas, Cebidae, Primates). Instituto Nacional, Pesquisas da Amazonia (INPA), Manaus, Brasil.Google Scholar
Ayres, J. M. 1986. Uakaris and Amazonian flooded forest. Unpubl. PhD thesis, University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ayres, J. M. & Clutton-Brock, T. H. 1992. River boundaries and species range size in Amazonian primates. American Naturalist 140:531537.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bodmer, R. D., Fang, T. G. & Ibanez, L. M. 1988. Primates and ungulates: a comparison of susceptibility to hunting. Primate Conservation 9:7983.Google Scholar
Bourlière, F. 1985. Primate communities: their structure and role in tropical ecosystems. International Journal of Primatology 6:126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Branch, L. C. 1981. Seasonal and habitat differences in the abundance of primates in the Amazon (Tapajós) National Park, Brazil. Primates 24(3):424431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnham, K. P., Anderson, D. R. & Laake, J. L. 1980. Estimation of density from line transect sampling of biological populations. Wildlife Monographs 72:1202.Google Scholar
Charles-Dominique, P. 1977. Ecology and behaviour of nocturnal primates: prosimians of Equatorial West Africa. Duckworth, London.Google Scholar
Clutton-Brock, T. H. & Harvey, P. H. 1977. Primate ecology and social organization. Journal of Zoology (London) 183:139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freese, C. 1975. Final report: a census of non-human primates in Peru. PAHO project AMRO-0719. Unpublished report.Google Scholar
Gautier-Hion, A. 1978. Food-niches and coexistence in sympatric primates in Gabon. Pp. 269286 in Chivers, D. J. & Herbert, J. (eds). Recent advances in primatology (Vol. 1). Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Gautier-Hion, A. & Gautier, J.-P. 1974. Les associations polyspecifiques de Cercopitheques du Plateau de M'passa (Gabon). Folia Primatologica 22:134177.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hershkovitz, P. 1984. The taxonomy of squirrel monkeys, genus Saimiri (Cebidae, Platyrrhini): a preliminary report with description of a hitherto unnamed form. American Journal of Primatology 6:257312.Google Scholar
Janson, C. H. & Emmons, L. H. 1990. Ecological structure of the non-flying mammal community at the Cocha Cashu Biological Station, Manu National Park, Peru. Pp. 314338 in Gentry, A. (ed.). Four neotropical rainforests. Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Johns, A. D. 1991. Forest disturbance and Amazonian primates. Pp. 115135 in Box, H. O. (ed.). Primate responses to environmental change. Chapman & Hall, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinzey, W. G. 1982. Distribution of primates and forest refuges. Pp. 455482 in Prance, G. T. (ed.). Biological diversification in the tropics. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Marsh, C. 1978. Ecology and social organization of the Tana River red colobus, Colobus badius rufomitratus. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Bristol.Google Scholar
Martin, R. D. 1981. Field studies of primate behaviour. Symposium of the Zoological Society. Land 46:287336.Google Scholar
Mittermeier, R. A. & Roosmalen, M. G. M. 1981. Preliminary observations on habitat utilization and diet in eight Surinam monkeys. Folia Primatologica 36:139.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moreno-Black, G. & Maples, W. R. 1977. Differential habitat utilization by four Cercopithecidae in a Kenyan forest. Folia Primatologica 27:85107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olson, D. K. 1986. Determining range size for arboreal monkeys: Methods, assumptions, and accuracy. Pp. 212227 in Taub, D. M. & King, F. A. (eds). Current perspectives in primate social dynamics. Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York.Google Scholar
Peres, C. A. 1988. Primate community structure in western Brazilian Amazonia. Primate Conservation 9:8387.Google Scholar
Peres, C. A. 1989. A survey of a gallery forest primate community, Marajó Island, Pará. Vida Silvestre Neotropical 2(1):3237.Google Scholar
Peres, C. A. 1990. Effects of hunting on western Amazonian primate communities. Biological Conservation 54:4759.Google Scholar
Peres, C. A. 1991a. Ecology of mixed-species groups of tamarins in Amazonian terra firme forests. Unpubl. PhD thesis, University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Peres, C. A. 1991b. Humboldt's woolly monkeys decimated by hunting in Amazonia. Oryx 25:8995.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peres, C. A. 1991c. Seed predation of Cariniana micrantha (Lecythidaceae) by brown capuchin monkeys in central Amazonia. Biotropica 23(3):262270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peres, C. A. In press a. Diet and feeding ecology of saddle-back and moustached tamarins in an Amazonian terra firme forest. Journal of Zoology, London.Google Scholar
Peres, C. A. In press b. Diet and feeding ecology of gray woolly, monkeys (Lagothrix lagotricha cana) in central Amazonia: comparisons with other Atelinae. International Journal of Primatology.Google Scholar
Peres, C. A. & Whittaker, A. 1991. Annotated checklist of the bird species of the upper Rio Urucu, Amazonas, Brazil. Bulletin of the British Ornithological Club 111(3):156171.Google Scholar
Peters, R. H. 1983. Ecological implications of body size. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rylands, A. B. 1987. Primate communities in Amazonian forests: their habitats and food sources. Experientia 43:265279.Google Scholar
Rylands, A. B. & Keuroghlian, A. 1986. Primate survival in forest fragments in central Amazonia: preliminary results. Pp. 213214 in Mello, M. T. (ed.). A primatologia no Brasil (Vol. 2). Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte.Google Scholar
Soini, P. 1986. A synecological study of a primate community in the Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve, Peru. Primate Conservation 7:6371.Google Scholar
Spironelo, W. R. 1991. A importancia de frutos de palmeiras (Palmae) na dieta de um grupo de Cebus apella na Amazonia Central. In Rylands, A. B. (ed.). A primatologia no Brasil (Vol. 3). Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte.Google Scholar
Terborgh, J. 1983. Five New World primates: a study in comparative ecology. Princeton University Press, Princeton. 260 pp.Google Scholar
Terborgh, J. & Stern, M. 1987. The surreptitious life of the saddle-backed tamarin. American Scientist 75:260269.Google Scholar
Thiollay, J. M. 1989. Area requirements for conservation of rain forest raptors and game birds in French Guiana. Conservation Biology 3:128137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thorington, R. W. Jr. 1985. The taxonomy and distribution of squirrel monkeys (Saimiri). Pp. 133 in Rosenblum, L. A. & Coe, C. L. (eds). Handbook of squirrel monkey research. Plenum Publications, New York.Google Scholar