4.7 Article

Chimpanzees balance resources and risk in an anthropogenic landscape of fear

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-83852-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FCT [IF/01128/2014/CP1233/CT0002]
  2. Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund [152510653]
  3. Conservation International/Global Wildlife Conservation's Primate Action Fund
  4. Primate Society of Great Britain
  5. International Primatological Society
  6. Darwin Initiative funding United Kingdom [26-018]
  7. Primate Conservation Inc
  8. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [IF/01128/2014/CP1233/CT0002] Funding Source: FCT

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By using a landscape of fear framework and Bayesian spatiotemporal modeling, researchers investigated how Critically Endangered western chimpanzees balance anthropogenic risks and optimal foraging trade-offs, finding that they adjusted their space use based on the availability of naturalized oil-palm fruit and optimized their foraging strategies in areas with cultivated fruits when wild fruits were scarce.
Human-wildlife coexistence is possible when animals can meet their ecological requirements while managing human-induced risks. Understanding how wildlife balance these trade-offs in anthropogenic environments is crucial to develop effective strategies to reduce risks of negative interactions, including bi-directional aggression and disease transmission. For the first time, we use a landscape of fear framework with Bayesian spatiotemporal modelling to investigate anthropogenic risk-mitigation and optimal foraging trade-offs in Critically Endangered western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus). Using 12 months of camera trap data (21 camera traps, 6722 camera trap days) and phenology on wild and cultivated plant species collected at Caiquene-Cadique, Cantanhez National Park (Guinea-Bissau), we show that humans and chimpanzees broadly overlapped in their use of forest and anthropogenic parts of the habitat including villages and cultivated areas. The spatiotemporal model showed that chimpanzee use of space was predicted by the availability of naturalised oil-palm fruit. Chimpanzees used areas away from villages and agriculture more intensively, but optimised their foraging strategies by increasing their use of village areas with cultivated fruits when wild fruits were scarce. Our modelling approach generates fine-resolution space-time output maps, which can be scaled-up to identify human-wildlife interaction hotspots at the landscape level, informing coexistence strategy.

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