Flower consumption, ambient temperature and rainfall modulate drinking behavior in a folivorous-frugivorous arboreal mammal
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Authors
Chaves Badilla, Oscar Mauricio
Fortes, Vanessa B.
Hass, Gabriela P.
Azevedo, Renata B.
Stoner, Kathryn E
Bicca Marques, Julio César
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Abstract
Water is vital for the survival of any species because of its key role in most physiological
processes. However, little is known about the non-food-related water sources exploited
by arboreal mammals, the seasonality of their drinking behavior and its potential drivers,
including diet composition, temperature, and rainfall. We investigated this subject in 14
wild groups of brown howler monkeys (Alouatta guariba clamitans) inhabiting small,
medium, and large Atlantic Forest fragments in southern Brazil. We found a wide variation in the mean rate of drinking among groups (range = 0–16 records/day). Streams
(44% of 1,258 records) and treeholes (26%) were the major types of water sources,
followed by bromeliads in the canopy (16%), pools (11%), and rivers (3%). The type of
source influenced whether howlers used a hand to access the water or not. Drinking
tended to be evenly distributed throughout the year, except for a slightly lower number
of records in the spring than in the other seasons, but it was unevenly distributed during
the day. It increased in the afternoon in all groups, particularly during temperature peaks
around 15:00 and 17:00. We found via generalized linear mixed modelling that the daily
frequency of drinking was mainly influenced negatively by flower consumption and positively by weekly rainfall and ambient temperature, whereas fragment size and the consumption of fruit and leaves played negligible roles. Overall, we confirm the importance
of preformed water in flowers to satisfy the howler’s water needs, whereas the influence
of the climatic variables is compatible with the ‘thermoregulation/dehydration-avoiding
hypothesis’. In sum, we found that irrespective of habitat characteristics, brown howlers
seem to seek a positive water balance by complementing the water present in the diet
with drinking water, even when it is associated with a high predation risk in terrestrial
sources.
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Keywords
Driking behavior, Neotropical primates, Alouatta guariba clamitans, Behavioral flexibility
Citation
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236974