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Influencing western gorilla nest construction at Mondika Research center

We collected nesting data from 512 fresh nest sites, including 3725 individual nests, of western gorillas at the Mondika Research Site, Central African Republic and Republic of Congo from 1996 through mid-1999. The mean count of nests of weaned individuals is 7.4 per nest site. Nest types included b...

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Published in:International journal of primatology 2002-12, Vol.23 (6), p.1257-1285
Main Authors: MEHLMAN, Patrick T, DORAN, Diane M
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DORAN, Diane M
description We collected nesting data from 512 fresh nest sites, including 3725 individual nests, of western gorillas at the Mondika Research Site, Central African Republic and Republic of Congo from 1996 through mid-1999. The mean count of nests of weaned individuals is 7.4 per nest site. Nest types included bare earth with no construction (45% of total), partial to full ground construction (34%), and arboreal (21%). Females, blackbacks, and juveniles as a combined age-sex class built significantly more arboreal nests (21% of total) than silverbacks did (2%). Proximate rainfall (independent of temperature) is significantly correlated with nest construction, i.e., as rainfall increased, silverbacks built more ground nests, and non-silverbacks built more ground and arboreal nests. Maximum daily temperature (independent of rainfall) is significantly negatively correlated with nest construction, i.e., as temperature increased, gorillas slept more often on bare earth without constructing a nest. Accordingly, we conclude that although nest building in gorillas may have innate components shared with other great apes, it is a flexible behavioral pattern that in some western populations is often not exhibited. It appears that when gorillas in this population build nests, they do so in response to both wet and cool conditions, and independently of diet, ranging, or group size.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Springer Nature
subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal ethology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Animals
Autoecology
Biological and medical sciences
Central African Republic
Construction
Construction activity
Ecology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gorillas
Mammalia
Nesting
Nests
Primates
Primatology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Rainfall
Research centres
Vertebrata
title Influencing western gorilla nest construction at Mondika Research center
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