Abstract
Wound healing in animals is important to minimize the fitness costs of infection. Logically, a longer healing time is associated with higher risk of infection and higher energy loss. In wild mammals, wounds caused by aggressive intraspecific interactions can potentially have lethal repercussions. Clarifying wounding rate and healing time is therefore important for measuring the severity of the attacks. In addition, impact of secondary damage of wounds (e.g., accidental peeling off of scabs) on heeling time is unknown despite the risk of infection in wild mammals. In baboons, most male injuries have been reported to result from male to male fights. Here, we investigated the relationship between wound size and healing time in wild anubis baboons to clarify the healing cost of physical attacks including secondary damage of wounds. Observations were conducted daily between August 2016 and July 2017 in Kenya for seven adult male anubis baboons. The individual wound rate was one per month on average. In 16 cases, we were able to assess the number of days required for wound healing, and the median healing time was 13 d. Wound healing time was longer for larger wounds. When the scab was peeled off accidentally because of external factors, healing time became longer. One of the causes of scabs’ peeling off was baboons’ scab-picking behavior, and the behaviour was considered self-injurious behavior. However, its predicted healing cost might not be high. We concluded that wounds less than 800 mm2 (the largest observed in this study) in baboon males have little effect on survival. Our results suggest that lethal wounds by physical attacks rarely occur in male baboons, and that healing time and delay caused by secondary damages can be estimated by measuring wound area.
Highlights
In animals, wound healing is important to minimize the fitness costs incurred by infection [1,2,3,4,5]
Because eight of the 16 cases included the day of Accidental peeling off of scabs (APS), we determined the influence of wound area on the number of days to healing by using the eight non-APS cases
Healing time can be predicted from the size of the wound area in terms of normal healing process of cutaneous wounds: scabs were formed on the wound area after wounding, and the healing was finished as scabs was peeled off naturally [20]
Summary
Wound healing is important to minimize the fitness costs incurred by infection [1,2,3,4,5]. When cutaneous wounds fail to heal, animals can experience high risk of infection [2, 3]. Injuries can affect reproductive activities, increase predation risk, and decrease feeding opportunities in wild vertebrates such as lizards [6], bats [7], red deer [8, 9], and primates [10,11,12].
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