4.2 Article

Silky Sifakas (Propithecus candidus) Use Sleep Sites for Thermoregulation, Food Access and Predator Avoidance

期刊

FOLIA PRIMATOLOGICA
卷 92, 期 5-6, 页码 315-326

出版社

BRILL
DOI: 10.1159/000520710

关键词

Lemur; Indriidae; Rainfall; Seasonality; Sleep trees; Temperature

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资金

  1. Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation
  2. Cornell University's Department of Psychology, Institute of African Studies
  3. Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies

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The sleeping site selection of silky sifakas in Marojejy National Park is influenced by factors such as thermoregulation, predation avoidance, and food access. Temperature and rainfall affect the height and distance of sleeping trees. Silky sifakas preferentially choose Weinmannia trees as sleeping trees, even though they are not abundant. Sleeping trees are higher compared to their daytime activity trees, and social sleeping in groups is more common than solitary sleeping.
Primate sleeping site selection is influenced by multiple ecological factors including predation avoidance, thermoregulation and food access. To test these hypotheses, we studied the sleeping trees used by a group of wild silky sifakas (Propithecus candidus) in Marojejy National Park, Madagascar. During this 10-month study, the group slept in 828 sleeping trees from approximately 35 genera. In support of thermoregulation, generalized linear models revealed that as temperature decreased, the number of individuals sleeping together significantly increased and they slept at further distances from the trunk. As rainfall increased, sleep site height significantly increased. Weinmannia was the most frequented tree genus, despite low abundance, accounting for 29% of all sleeping trees. In support of food access, 94.8% of sleeping trees were food trees. Weinmannia is among the most highly preferred food trees. The group slept at a mean height of 16.0 m near the top of tall trees which averaged 19.5 m. Sleep trees were significantly taller than trees in botanical plots within the sifaka's home range. They never slept in the same trees on consecutive nights, and sleeping heights were significantly higher than daytime heights which is consistent with predation avoidance. Social sleeping in groups of 2 or 3 individuals (62.9%) was more common than solitary sleeping (37.1%). At such heights, huddling may increase vigilance and lessen the risk of predation by fossa (Cryptoprocta ferox) while also reducing heat loss. These patterns suggest that silky sifaka sleep site choice is influenced by thermoregulation and food access in addition to predation avoidance. We suggest that understanding sleep site use can assist in conservation of species like silky sifakas by enabling researchers to find new groups, protect habitats with key tree species and inform reforestation efforts. (C) 2021 S. Karger AG, Basel

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