2019
DOI: 10.1163/1568539x-00003565
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Interactions with humans impose time constraints on urban-dwelling rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)

Abstract: Time is a valuable but limited resource, and animals' survival depends on their ability to carefully manage the amount of time they allocate to each daily activity. While existing research has examined the ecological factors affecting animals' activity budgets, the impact of anthropogenic factors on urban-dwelling animals' time budgets remains understudied. Here we collected data through focal animal sampling from three groups of rhesus macaques in Northern India to examine whether interactions with humans dec… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(41 citation statements)
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References 91 publications
(114 reference statements)
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“…We collected data for a total duration of 11 months spread across all three seasons described above. We used data collection protocols and ethograms that we had previously standardized and implemented on urban‐dwelling rhesus macaque in Northern India, and long‐tailed macaques in Malaysia (Kaburu et al, , b; Marty, Beisner, et al, ). MA and five field assistants collected data for 2–3 days per week per macaque group, using 10‐min focal animal sampling (Altmann, , ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We collected data for a total duration of 11 months spread across all three seasons described above. We used data collection protocols and ethograms that we had previously standardized and implemented on urban‐dwelling rhesus macaque in Northern India, and long‐tailed macaques in Malaysia (Kaburu et al, , b; Marty, Beisner, et al, ). MA and five field assistants collected data for 2–3 days per week per macaque group, using 10‐min focal animal sampling (Altmann, , ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In each focal session, we recorded all human‐macaque and macaque‐macaque interactions that involved the focal subject in a continuous manner, capturing both the time of occurrence of each interaction and the sequence. We recorded both more frequently occurring human‐macaque interactions such as (a) mutual contact and noncontact aggression, (b) avoidance, and (c) human provisioning of macaques, as well as less frequently occurring interactions initiated by humans towards macaques such as (d) attention, (e) lure, (f) taunt, (g) stare, and (h) touch (see Kaburu et al, , b for detailed definitions). Among the macaque‐macaque interactions, we recorded (a) agonistic behavior which included contact and noncontact aggression that elicited a clear submissive response from the recipient, (b) submissive behavior outside of aggressive contexts, and (c) grooming (including an end‐time in addition to the start‐time to capture bout‐durations) (see Kaburu et al, , b for detailed definitions).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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