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1.
Heliyon ; 5(4): e01468, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31008400

ABSTRACT

Knowledge of how human harvest impacts plants on high demand for non-timber forest products is essential for targeted conservation. Herbs and shrubs are some of the main sources of such products. However, documentation of human impact on forest flora usually focuses trees. We assessed the status of three forest understory shrubs on high demand for various non-timber forest product uses around Mabira Central Forest Reserve, Uganda. Acalypha neptunica is popular for commercial meat roasting and vending. Citropsis articulata and Calamus deerratus are collected for medicine and furniture making respectively. Harvest impact on A. neptunica and C. articulata was assessed using transects with human trails as a reference in 12 of the 66 management compartments of the reserve. C. deerratus, was assessed through a reserve-wide search. A. neptunica and C. articulata increased significantly with distance from human trails (Jonckheere-Terpstra Tests: A. neptunica, p = 0.022; C. articulata, p < 0.0001) suggesting occurence of human harvest impact on density. All species showed significant decrease uphill from the valley bottoms (Jonckheere-Terpstra Tests: C. articulata, p < 0.0001; C. deerratus, p < 0.0001; and A. neptunica, p = 0.004) indicating intrinsic vulnerability due to habitat specificity. Interspecies comparisons of density showed A. neptunica to be much more abundant than C. articulata. C. deerratus was localized to patches along some, but not all valley bottoms. A. neptunica exhibited a high level of post-harvest re-sprouting and appeared favored by moderate forest disturbance. C. articulata also showed frequent re-sprouting. These results complement prevailing understanding that conservation actions are urgently needed for C. articulata and C. deerratus. The results also show that further long-term investigation is required to fully understand the plants' response to harvesting and this needs to be facilitated by enforcing the existing strict nature reserve status of the core of the forest.

2.
Int J Primatol ; 32(2): 474-490, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21475401

ABSTRACT

Among social vertebrates, immigrants may incur a substantial fitness cost when they attempt to join a new group. Dispersers could reduce that cost, or increase their probability of mating via coalition formation, by immigrating into groups containing first- or second-degree relatives. We here examine whether dispersing males tend to move into groups containing fathers or brothers in gray-cheeked mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena) in Kibale National Park, Uganda. We sampled blood from 21 subadult and adult male mangabeys in 7 social groups and genotyped them at 17 microsatellite loci. Twelve genotyped males dispersed to groups containing other genotyped adult males during the study; in only 1 case did the group contain a probable male relative. Contrary to the prediction that dispersing males would follow kin, relatively few adult male dyads were likely first- or second-degree relatives; opportunities for kin-biased dispersal by mangabeys appear to be rare. During 4 yr of observation, adult brothers shared a group only once, and for only 6 wk. Mean relatedness among adult males sharing a group was lower than that among males in different groups. Randomization tests indicate that closely related males share groups no more often than expected by chance, although these tests had limited power. We suggest that the demographic conditions that allow kin-biased dispersal to evolve do not occur in mangabeys, may be unusual among primates, and are worth further attention.

3.
Conserv Biol ; 23(5): 1138-45, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19765034

ABSTRACT

Harvesting of wild plants for nontimber uses is widespread in the tropics, but its impact is usually quantified only for one or a few species at a time. Thus, forest managers are never clear about how well their efforts are protecting such plants. We quantified abundance and edge-related variation in 91 species of useful wild plants commonly harvested by communities around Bwindi Impenetrable National Park (BINP), Uganda, to evaluate the effect of their harvest. Forty percent of these species were harvested exclusively for medicines, 22% for weaving, and 24% for other uses. Fourteen percent were harvested for combinations of uses. Plants were surveyed around the entire periphery of the park transects that extended out 1 km into the forest interior from the edge. Analyses of edge and interior distribution were controlled for effects of topography. Individually, nine (10%) species were very rare, occurring in <0.5% of the plots searched. Of the remaining 82 species, most (50%) decreased significantly away from the park boundary, whereas 4.9% increased and 45.1% showed no pronounced edge-related distributions. Rarer species were no more likely to be less abundant near the edge than commoner species. These results suggest that most plants used for nontimber purposes in BINP are not currently being harvested unsustainably. In this respect many of the species of useful wild plants we examined resembled animals commonly hunted in tropical forests for bushmeat because they increased in abundance in disturbed habitat. Conservation action should initially aim to understand what influences distributions of very rare species. Edge-based assessments of distributions may be valuable for revealing harvest impact on species of useful wild plants commonly harvested by people living around forest islands in the tropics.


Subject(s)
Plants, Medicinal , Ecosystem , Species Specificity , Uganda
4.
Int J Primatol ; 30(3): 443-466, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20376178

ABSTRACT

We investigated long-term site fidelity of gray-cheeked mangabey (Lophocebus albigena) groups in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Concurrently, we monitored shifts in home range by individual females and subadult and adult males. We documented home range stability by calculating the area of overlap in successive years, and by recording the drift of each group's monthly centroid from its initial location. Home ranges remained stable for 3 of our 4 groups (overlap over 10 yr >60%). Core areas were more labile, but group centroids drifted an average of only 530 m over the entire decade. Deviations from site fidelity were associated with dispersal or group fission. During natal dispersal, subadult males expanded their home ranges over many months, settling

5.
Am J Primatol ; 66(4): 331-49, 2005 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16104031

ABSTRACT

We describe the movements and fates of 36 collared gray-cheeked male mangabeys (Lophocebus albigena) that resided in seven social groups in Kibale National Park, Uganda. The male mangabeys were captured, radiotagged, and then contacted regularly over a period of up to 8 years. Individuals varied considerably in how tightly they were associated with their groups. "Central" males were usually found in close spatial association with their own groups, but they sometimes visited others. "Peripheral" males were often found several hundred meters away from their own groups. Most adult males were characterized by repeated intergroup transfers, manifested as "visits" and "dispersals." Visits were transfers that did not result in mating. The visits were brief, and ranged from a few minutes to a few days before the male returned to his previous group, moved on to another group, or returned to solitary life. The term "dispersal" refers to a transfer that results in mating, after which the male remains in the new group. Young males began to drift away from their natal groups in early subadulthood, but the timing of first associations with estrous females in other groups was highly variable. Natal dispersers were generally solitary for a month or more, and at least half moved into nonadjacent groups. Secondary dispersal was common. After they immigrated, adult males remained in a group for a median of 19 months before they emigrated again, with the probability of departure being approximately constant in time. Secondary dispersal was usually made into an adjacent group and lasted less than 7 days. Emigration and immigration were not seasonal, and males emigrated singly and apparently independently; however, immigrations were clumped in time, and male dispersal contributed to considerable heterogeneity of group composition. L. albigena dispersal patterns are intermediate between those described for Papio baboons and forest Cercopithecus, and models that predict demographic consequences of dispersal for baboons can be refined to apply to mangabeys.


Subject(s)
Cercocebus/physiology , Social Behavior , Spatial Behavior/physiology , Animals , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Models, Theoretical , Motor Activity/physiology , Population Dynamics , Telemetry , Uganda
6.
Am J Primatol ; 32(3): 197-205, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31936918

ABSTRACT

Mangabey groups studied in the Kibale Forest Reserve, Uganda, in 1971 were studied again in 1991 using similar data collection protocols. The results were used to assess the effect of group size on activity budgets and travel costs, and to document the effects of habitat changes on mangabey density and demography. Larger mangabey groups traveled longer distances per day than smaller groups. Time budgets were less clearly influenced by group size. Mangabey population density increased over the 20 year period. This increase in population density paralleled habitat changes, particularly an increase in tree density, and was accompanied by increased use of regenerating forest. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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