2015
DOI: 10.1007/s10329-015-0476-0
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Bonobo habituation in a forest–savanna mosaic habitat: influence of ape species, habitat type, and sociocultural context

Abstract: Habituation is the term used to describe acceptance by wild animals of a human observer as a neutral element in their environment. Among primates, the process takes from a few days for Galago spp. to several years for African apes. There are also intraspecies differences reflecting differences in habitat, home range, and ape-human relationship history. Here, we present the first study of the process of bonobo habituation in a fragmented habitat, a forest-savanna mosaic in the community-based conservation area … Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Individual animals can be stressed during habituation (Jack et al, 2008;McDougall, 2012), and, while stress levels may decrease over time, the long-term impact of human presence is not well understood (Bejder, Samuels, Whitehead, Finn, & Allen, 2009). Group composition may also be influenced by researcher presence (Narat, Pennec, Simmen, Ngawolo, & Krief, 2015;Sommer, Adanu, Faucher, & Fowler, 2003), as individual animals habituate at different rates and, thus, may join or separate themselves from the main group, potentially altering intragroup interactions.…”
Section: Potential Ethical Concerns Of Habituationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Individual animals can be stressed during habituation (Jack et al, 2008;McDougall, 2012), and, while stress levels may decrease over time, the long-term impact of human presence is not well understood (Bejder, Samuels, Whitehead, Finn, & Allen, 2009). Group composition may also be influenced by researcher presence (Narat, Pennec, Simmen, Ngawolo, & Krief, 2015;Sommer, Adanu, Faucher, & Fowler, 2003), as individual animals habituate at different rates and, thus, may join or separate themselves from the main group, potentially altering intragroup interactions.…”
Section: Potential Ethical Concerns Of Habituationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the highestrated concerns was that trails may make subjects more vulnerable to poaching; however, less than half of participants reported reducing the number of trails at their study site. Alternatively, researchers may perceive the establishment of field sites to be an effective method of deterring poaching (Cranfield, 2008;Narat et al, 2015;Pusey et al, 2008)…”
Section: Mitigation Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Batéké people depend on the forest where they have a lot of activities, mainly slash-and-burn shifting agriculture, hunting, fishing and gathering (Table 1). After a first encounter with the NGO and the local people for a pilot study in 2008 (six weeks), VN and SK started with MMT a longterm research project on bonobos in 2010 in the Manzano forest, near the Embirima village ( Figure 2) [14,15]. From 2010 to 2013, five field campaigns (10 months in total) were conducted to habituate and study wild bonobos.…”
Section: A New Study Case-mbou-mon-tourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the other sites, trackers worked voluntarily until 2012 and were then paid by MMT supported by recent partnerships with western zoos and environmental NGOs. Bonobo habituation is in process in Nkala and Mpelu sites (led by WWF) and at Embirima (led by VN and MMT) [15]. The sites of Mbee, Bodzuna and Makaa are only for the monitoring of bonobos in order to protect them but to avoid having more than three bonobo communities under a habituation process, as recommended by the IUCN [30].…”
Section: Protection Of the Bonobomentioning
confidence: 99%
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