Abstract

AbstractTerrestrial animals feed on fruit dropped by arboreal frugivores in tropical forests around the world, but it remains unknown whether the resulting spatial associations of these animals are coincidental or intentionally maintained. On Barro Colorado Island, Panama, we used a combination of acoustic playback experiments, remote camera monitoring, and GPS tracking to quantify the frequency of such interactions, determine who initiates and maintains spatial associations, and test whether terrestrial animals adopt a strategy of acoustic eavesdropping to locate fruit patches created by foraging primates. Indeed, 90% of fruits collected in fruit fall traps had tooth marks of arboreal frugivores, and terrestrial frugivores visited fruit trees sooner following visits by GPS‐collared monkeys. While our play back experiments were insufficient to support the hypothesis that terrestrial frugivores use auditory cues to locate food dropped by arboreal primates, analyses of movement paths of capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus), spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi), and coatis (Nasua narica) reveal that observed patterns of interspecific attraction are not merely a byproduct of mutual attraction to shared resources. Coatis were significantly more likely to initiate close encounters with arboreal primates thanvice versaand maintained these associations by spending significantly longer periods at fruiting trees when collared primates were present. Our results demonstrate that terrestrial frugivores are attracted to arboreal primates, likely because they increase local resource availability. Primates are often among the first species in a habitat to be extirpated by hunting; our results suggest that their loss may have unanticipated consequences for the frugivore community.Abstract in Spanish is available with online material.

Highlights

  • Tropical rainforests are complex ecosystems where diverse communities of plants and animals are connected by networks of interspecific interactions (Miura et al, 1997)

  • Terrestrial animals feed on fruit dropped by arboreal frugivores in tropical forests around the world, but it remains unknown whether the resulting spatial associations of these animals are coincidental or intentionally maintained

  • On Barro Colorado Island, Panama, we used a combination of acoustic playback experiments, remote camera monitoring, and GPS tracking to quantify the frequency of such interactions, determine who initiates and maintains spatial associations, and test whether terrestrial animals adopt a strategy of acoustic eavesdropping to locate fruit patches created by foraging primates

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Tropical rainforests are complex ecosystems where diverse communities of plants and animals are connected by networks of interspecific interactions (Miura et al, 1997). Interspecific associations where animals of different species forage together can involve commensalism, parasitism, or mutualism (Danchin et al, 2004), with varying degrees of behavioral interactions from passive associations with no direct interactions, to coordinated activities (Stensland et al, 2003). These associations may be the result of species selecting similar habitats because they are attracted to the same resources (Arita & Vargas, 1995), or because they are attracted to one another for anti-­predator benefits (Fitzgibbon, 1990) and increased foraging efficiency (Stensland et al, 2003). We test if (a) arboreal primates increase the availability of fruit for terrestrial frugivores, (b) terrestrial frugivores spend more time with arboreal primates than would be expected by chance, (c) terrestrial frugivores eavesdrop on cues made by arboreal primates to locate ephemeral food sources and they are attracted to these auditory cues, and (d) terrestrial frugivores stay longer and/or revisit fruit trees more frequently when arboreal primates are present

| METHODS
Camera trap
| RESULTS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
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