Abstract
The feeding ecology of rhesus monkeys,Macaca mulatta, was studied between 1978 and 1981. The study site, located in the Murree Hills of northwestern Pakistan, supported a mixed coniferous-deciduous forest community and was characterized by a high degree of human disturbance. We used a linear transect method to sample the species composition and structure of the vegetation. Comparison of these data with historical records showed that the forest has undergone major changes in the last hundred years. Data on feeding behavior were collected through on-the-minute focal animal sampling. The monkeys spent about 45% of the day feeding. Their preferred foods were grass, clover, and other ground herbs that occur in the disturbed sites. Fruit accounted for less than 9% of feeding records. The rhesus monkey may be pre-adapted to living in disturbed-site, forest-edge communities. The evolutionary history of Macaca mulatta may be tied closely to the disappearance of forest and the spread of meadows and savannahs over the last million years.
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Goldstein, S.J., Richard, A.F. Ecology of rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) in northwest Pakistan. Int J Primatol 10, 531–567 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02739364
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02739364