They chew by night? Nighttime behaviour in a ‘ruminating’ primate, the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus)

Author:

Bösch J.1ORCID,McGrosky A.2,Tuuga A.3,Tangah J.4,Clauss M.1ORCID,Matsuda I.5678ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinic for Zoo Animals, Exotic Pets and Wildlife, Vetsuisse Faculty University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

2. Evolutionary Anthropology Duke University Durham NC USA

3. Sabah Wildlife Department Wisma Muis Kota Kinabalu Malaysia

4. Forest Research Centre Sabah Forestry Department Sandakan Malaysia

5. Wildlife Research Center of Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

6. Chubu Institute for Advanced Studies Chubu University Kasugai‐shi Japan

7. Chubu University Academy of Emerging Sciences Kasugai‐shi Japan

8. Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation Universiti Malaysia Sabah Kota Kinabalu Malaysia

Abstract

AbstractStudies of diurnal primates have long considered the nocturnal period to be a time spent merely sleeping and not effectively utilized for foraging or social behaviours. However, digestive activity should continue during the night. To explore the adaptive significance of the primate rumination‐like behaviour, that is, regurgitation and re‐mastication (R/R), observed in the proboscis monkey Nasalis larvatus (but only infrequently during the day), we tested the hypothesis that they frequently awaken and ‘ruminate’ at night through detailed nocturnal observations. We analysed infrared video recordings of nocturnal behaviours of 179 individuals over 35 nights, totalling over 251 h, of free‐ranging proboscis monkeys in the lower Kinabatangan region of Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. The results showed that, as we expected, proboscis monkeys were frequently awake at night; they only slept about one third of the time observed at night (27.4 ± 24.6%), with juveniles sleeping the most and subadults sleeping the least. However, contrary to our expectations, R/R did not appear to occur more frequently than during daytime observations and accounted for a minor proportion of the total activity budget during the night. Whether frequent waking up during the night represents an adaptive strategy in relation to predation avoidance, or is a consequence of disturbance (e.g. due to moving branches or mosquitoes), requires further study, ideally in comparison with protected ex situ conditions. Our findings suggest that without detailed observations, primate sleeping times may easily be overestimated due to a high proportion of time spent awake but resting.

Funder

National Geographic Society

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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