4.5 Article

The Development of Primate Raiding: Implications for Management and Conservation

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 1, Pages 133-156

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10764-009-9387-5

Keywords

baboons; control techniques; foraging strategy; Kenya primate raiding; rapid field assessments

Categories

Funding

  1. University of California
  2. San Diego
  3. Academic Senate
  4. Fyssen Foundation
  5. East African Wildlife Society
  6. New York Zoological Society
  7. World Wildlife Fund
  8. Leakey Foundation
  9. H. F. Guggenheim Foundation

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Ecosystems and habitats are fast becoming human dominated, which means that more species, including primates, are compelled to exploit new human resources to survive and compete. Primate pests pose major management and conservation challenges. I here present the results from a unique opportunity to document how well-known individuals and groups respond to the new opportunity to feed on human foods. Data are from a long-term study of a single population in Kenya at Kekopey, near Gilgil, Kenya. Some of the naive research baboons became raiders while others did not. I compare diet, activity budgets, and home range use of raiders and nonraiders both simultaneously, after the incursion of agriculture, and historically compared to the period before agriculture appeared. I present measures of the relative benefits (female reproduction) and costs (injuries, mortality, and survivorship) of incorporating human food into the diet and discuss why the baboons raid and their variations in raiding tendencies. Guarding and chasing are evaluated as control techniques. I also suggest conflict mitigation strategies by identifying the most likely options in different contexts. I end with a proposal for a rapid field assessment of human wildlife conflict involving primates.

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