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Densities of Two Frugivorous Primates with Respect to Forest and Fragment Tree Species Composition and Fruit Availability

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Conservation of wildlife populations requires extensive knowledge of their habitat requirements, efficient methods to evaluate habitat quality, and an understanding of the value of fragments and edges. Kibale National Park, Uganda has areas that differ in the densities of 2 species of frugivorous monkeys—Cercopithecus mitis and Lophocebus albigena—including one on an edge and forest fragments outside the park that lack both species. We compared the basal area densities of important food trees with primate densities. The density of Cercopithecus mitis correlates most strongly with the basal area density of all types of food trees combined. The density of Lophocebus albigena does not correlate with the basal area densities of any category of food trees or with fruit availability. An index of their density—number of groups seen per km walked—correlates to fruit availability but with marginal significance. Lack of a relationship between the basal area densities of food trees and density of Lophocebus albigena may be the result of a mismatch in scale between the forest area measured and their large home ranges. We compared the unused area of forest to the other areas of the forest and the fragments and found it had higher basal area densities in all food tree categories for both species than the fragments and lower basal area densities of most categories than the other parts of the forest, indicating that the fragments are poor quality and would probably be unused even if dispersal were likely.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to Amooti Katusabe Swaibu for providing invaluable assistance with fieldwork and John Poulsen for his help. The Wildlife Conservation Society, the National Science Foundation (grant no. SBR-9617664, SBR-990899), and an Alumni Fellowship from the University of Florida provided funding for this research. Makerere University Biological Field Station, Uganda Wildlife Authority, and the National Council on Science and Technology granted permission to conduct research in Kibale National Park.

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Correspondence to Cedric O’Driscoll Worman.

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Worman, C.O., Chapman, C.A. Densities of Two Frugivorous Primates with Respect to Forest and Fragment Tree Species Composition and Fruit Availability. Int J Primatol 27, 203–225 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10764-005-9007-y

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