Abstract

In Southeast Asian forests, there are dramatic supra-annual peaks in fruit availability known as mast fruiting, followed by low-fruit periods. Gibbons are frugivorous small apes. In this study, we investigated how gibbons varied their social and calling behaviors in response to changes in fruit availability. Activity budget, travel distance, sleeping time, and song duration of two wild Northern Gray gibbon (Hylobates funereus) groups were investigated during both mast and non-mast fruiting periods at the Danum Valley Conservation Area, Sabah, Malaysia. Gibbons traveled longer, entered the sleeping tree later, and spent more time engaged in singing, playing, and grooming behaviors during the mast fruiting period. Playing and grooming are intra-group social interactions. Gibbon songs were sung antiphonally within and among groups, indicating that singing is both an intra- and inter-group social interaction. Furthermore, copulatory behaviors that occurred during female pregnancy were observed during the mast fruiting period, suggesting this might be a social interaction behavior rather than a reproductive activity. Our results show that gibbons extended their daily activity schedules during the mast fruiting period and spent this extra time on social interactions. We examined whether male song complexity increased during the mast fruiting period by using the Levenshtein distance method, but we did not find such a trend. In the mast fruiting period, gibbons may consume more energy than in the non-mast fruiting period. Social and calling behaviors are energetically costly. Our results show that there is a link between energy intake and social and calling behaviors.

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