Tg. Obrien et Mf. Kinnaird, BEHAVIOR, DIET, AND MOVEMENTS OF THE SULAWESI CRESTED BLACK MACAQUE (MACACA-NIGRA), International journal of primatology, 18(3), 1997, pp. 321-351
We present the first field study of activity budgets, diet and ranging
patterns of the Sulawesi crested black macaque, Macaca nigra, one of
seven macaque species endemic to Sulawesi, Indonesia. We studied three
crested macaque groups, ranging in size from 50 to 97 individuals, fo
r 18 months in the Tangkoko-DuaSudara Nature Reserve, North Sulawesi.
They spent 59% of the day moving and procuring food, especially fruits
, and 41% of the day resting and socializing. Their diet is composed o
f more than 145 species of fruit (66% of observed feeding bouts), vege
tative material (2.5%), invertebrates (31.5%), and occasional vertebra
te prey. Group differences were more pronounced than seasonal or diurn
al differences. Specifically, the largest group moved farther during t
he day, moved at a faster and more uniform rate, ate less fruit, reste
d more, and socialized less than the smaller groups did. The largest g
roup had the largest home range, but it included less primary forest a
nd more disturbed habitat than the ranges of smaller groups. There are
individual differences in activity budgets of adult males and females
in time spent moving, resting, Seeding, and socializing that may refl
ect differences in reproductive strategies of males versus females. Th
e behavior of large juveniles is more similar to that of adults than t
o that of small juveniles. Daily movements and use of home range are c
orrelated with diet. Macaques moved shorter distances as the proportio
n of time spent feeding on fruit increased, and the top four dietary i
tems accounted for most of the variance in entry into hectare blocks o
f home range.