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Characterizing activity budgets in response to seasonality and anthropogenic pressures provides insights into primate behavioral ecology. The Arsi geladas (T. gelada arsi) are a distinct and little-known subspecies of geladas living south of the Rift Valley in eastern Arsi, Ethiopia, where elevation and rainfall levels are low, temperatures are high, and habitat loss and degradation threaten the geladas. To better understand how Arsi geladas cope with the challenges of their highly disturbed and climatically challenging environment, we conducted 16 months of observational scan sampling on a focal band of approx. 35 individuals (consisting of two one-male units) at Goro-Jena to examine diurnal and seasonal variation in their activity budgets. Overall, Arsi geladas spent most of their time feeding (57.3 ± 5.0%), followed by socializing (18.7% ± 3.8), moving (12.5 ± 5.0), and resting (10.2 ± 3.1). Feeding peaked in the late morning and late afternoon and social behavior peaked in the early morning near sleeping sites. Resting also peaked in the early morning as well as around mid-day, when ambient temperatures were warmest, the latter peak potentially reflecting the thermoregulatory challenges of the hot climate in Arsi. Arsi geladas exhibited only minor seasonal shifts in their activity patterns with increases in feeding time corresponding with periods of lower resource availability and quality. Percentage of time devoted to feeding by geladas at Goro-Jena was comparable to that of some populations at high elevations which themselves must cope with cold climates. This finding suggests that Arsi geladas at Goro-Jena occupy a marginal environment that imposes substantial energetic stress on them. As such, priority conservation actions must include protecting and expanding natural gelada habitat at Goro-Jena - as well as elsewhere in Arsi - to ensure the persistence of this increasingly rare and threatened gelada subspecies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/14219980-bja10059 | DOI Listing |
Folia Primatol (Basel)
April 2025
Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis (CEES), Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Blindern, Oslo, Norway.
Characterizing activity budgets in response to seasonality and anthropogenic pressures provides insights into primate behavioral ecology. The Arsi geladas (T. gelada arsi) are a distinct and little-known subspecies of geladas living south of the Rift Valley in eastern Arsi, Ethiopia, where elevation and rainfall levels are low, temperatures are high, and habitat loss and degradation threaten the geladas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Primatol
February 2020
Department of Anthropology and Environmental Studies Program, California State University Fullerton, Fullerton, California.
Predation is widely believed to exert strong selective pressure on primate behavior and ecology but is difficult to study and rarely observed. In this study, we describe seven encounters between lone wild leopards (Panthera pardus) and herds of geladas (Theropithecus gelada) over a 6-year period in an intact Afroalpine grassland ecosystem at the Guassa Community Conservation Area, Ethiopia. Three encounters consisted of attempted predation on geladas by leopards, one of which was successful.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrimates
March 2018
Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, PO Box 1066, Blindern, 0316, Oslo, Norway.
Understanding the basic natural history of threatened primate taxa is crucial to developing and implementing successful conservation strategies for them. Data on feeding ecology and activity patterns are particularly important for identifying the strategies through which primates invest time and foraging effort towards survival and reproduction at a given locale. Here, we report the results of the first study of the diet and activity budget of Arsi geladas, a population of < 1000 individuals endemic to a heavily disturbed region of the southern Ethiopian Highlands and believed to represent a new taxon of geladas.
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July 2003
Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Kanrin, Inuyama, Aichi 484-8506, Japan.
In 1989 a new gelada baboon ( Theropithecus gelada) population was found in Arsi, on the opposite side of the Rift Valley to that of the known gelada populations of Semien and Showa. Previous comparisons of units of the band at Gado Goro, Arsi, in the same season in consecutive years, indicated that unit structure is less stable among Arsi geladas as compared to the Semien population. Gelada units of the band at Gado-Goro were studied for 7 months in order to investigate the processes of social changes.
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