2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109925
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Wild Chimpanzees on the Edge: Nocturnal Activities in Croplands

Abstract: In a rapidly changing landscape highly impacted by anthropogenic activities, the great apes are facing new challenges to coexist with humans. For chimpanzee communities inhabiting encroached territories, not bordered by rival conspecifics but by human agricultural fields, such boundaries are risky areas. To investigate the hypothesis that they use specific strategies for incursions out of the forest into maize fields to prevent the risk of detection by humans guarding their field, we carried out video recordin… Show more

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Cited by 93 publications
(100 citation statements)
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“…Baboons ( Papio ), Hanuman langurs ( Semnopithecus ), and macaques ( Macaca ) are particularly adaptable and can survive even in urban areas ( 49 ). Chimpanzees appear to evaluate risks when crop-foraging and adjust their foraging patterns in deciding whether to exploit fragmented forests near humans ( 50 ). Bonobos tend to avoid areas of high human activity, fragmented forests, or both, and although this may suggest flexibility, the presence of humans appears to significantly reduce their access to potentially available habitat ( 51 ).…”
Section: Factors That Threaten Primate Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Baboons ( Papio ), Hanuman langurs ( Semnopithecus ), and macaques ( Macaca ) are particularly adaptable and can survive even in urban areas ( 49 ). Chimpanzees appear to evaluate risks when crop-foraging and adjust their foraging patterns in deciding whether to exploit fragmented forests near humans ( 50 ). Bonobos tend to avoid areas of high human activity, fragmented forests, or both, and although this may suggest flexibility, the presence of humans appears to significantly reduce their access to potentially available habitat ( 51 ).…”
Section: Factors That Threaten Primate Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although fine-scale data can be obtained, it also is important to understand the factors that drive physiological and behavioural modifications. Nocturnal crop raiding activity by chimpanzees, for example, was associated not with a warming climate and the avoidance of daytime activity, but rather with the avoidance of humans who are in the fields during the day [158]. Also, although biologging overcomes the problem of human observers influencing an animal's responses [50], care needs to be taken to minimize the impact of animal-borne sensors or monitoring on an animal's welfare.…”
Section: Behavioural Adjustmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among many applications, such methods could be used to document situations where primates are in conflict with people in species ranging from chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) [26] to macaques (Macaca mulatta) [27] allowing us to quantify the occurrence of such events and their spatial-temporal dynamics. One of the most high-profile non-human primate-human conflict occurs with people and baboons in the Cape Peninsula, South Africa, with baboons raiding bins, properties or taking food directly from people themselves daily [28].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%