Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees

IntroductionThe association between an open habitat (e.g., savannah-mosaics) and increased terrestriality is central to hypotheses of hominin evolution, especially the emergence and evolution of bipedalism, as well as ape evolution as far back as the early Miocene. However, the selective pressures t...

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Main Authors: Rhianna C. Drummond-Clarke, Susan Chege Reuben, Fiona A. Stewart, Alex K. Piel, Tracy L. Kivell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2025.1561078/full
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author Rhianna C. Drummond-Clarke
Susan Chege Reuben
Fiona A. Stewart
Fiona A. Stewart
Fiona A. Stewart
Alex K. Piel
Alex K. Piel
Alex K. Piel
Tracy L. Kivell
author_facet Rhianna C. Drummond-Clarke
Susan Chege Reuben
Fiona A. Stewart
Fiona A. Stewart
Fiona A. Stewart
Alex K. Piel
Alex K. Piel
Alex K. Piel
Tracy L. Kivell
author_sort Rhianna C. Drummond-Clarke
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionThe association between an open habitat (e.g., savannah-mosaics) and increased terrestriality is central to hypotheses of hominin evolution, especially the emergence and evolution of bipedalism, as well as ape evolution as far back as the early Miocene. However, the selective pressures that act on apes in an open habitat remain poorly understood. Observations of chimpanzees that live in savannah-mosaics, analogous to some reconstructed hominoid palaeohabitats, can provide valuable insight into the behavioural adaptations of a large-bodied, semi-arboreal ape to an open habitat, characterised by sparsely distributed food sources and a broken canopy. We previously showed that savannah-dwelling chimpanzees in the Issa Valley, western Tanzania, maintain a high level of arboreality, and particularly suspensory behaviour, largely associated with foraging. Here, we investigate how chimpanzee foraging strategy in a savannah-mosaic may drive a high frequency of arboreal behaviours despite reduced arboreal pathways. Specifically, we hypothesized that Issa chimpanzees would spend more time foraging (and moving) per tree to maximize utilization of food in a sparse landscape. This foraging strategy would be facilitated by foraging in trees with large crowns and abundant terminal-branch foods, which are characteristic of miombo woodlands. However, the link between foraging positional behaviour and tree structure remains understudied.MethodsWe collected data on arboreal foraging behaviour and corresponding tree structural characteristics over five months in the dry season, and used generalized linear mixed models to test for any effect of food type and tree structural characteristics on (1) duration of foraging bouts, (2) frequency of locomotion, and (3) use of suspensory behaviour.ResultsWe found that food types and tree structures found in woodland vegetation are associated with more time spent in foraging trees, a higher rate of locomotion, and the use of suspension in particular.DiscussionOur results suggest that arboreal, and especially suspensory, locomotion can be advantageous for foraging in a savannah-mosaic and not just closed forest habitats. These findings have implications for reconstructing hominoid positional behaviour from the fossil record and provide a model for how arboreality, and specifically suspensory behaviour, could have been an important part of the hominoid niche in savannah-mosaic habitats.
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spelling doaj-art-e02708c098e244bcbfb3c32355cd058e2025-08-20T03:34:57ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2025-07-011310.3389/fevo.2025.15610781561078Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzeesRhianna C. Drummond-Clarke0Susan Chege Reuben1Fiona A. Stewart2Fiona A. Stewart3Fiona A. Stewart4Alex K. Piel5Alex K. Piel6Alex K. Piel7Tracy L. Kivell8Department of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, GermanyGMERC, Ltd., Mpanda, TanzaniaDepartment of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, GermanyGMERC, Ltd., Mpanda, TanzaniaDepartment of Anthropology, University College London, London, United KingdomDepartment of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, GermanyGMERC, Ltd., Mpanda, TanzaniaDepartment of Anthropology, University College London, London, United KingdomDepartment of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, GermanyIntroductionThe association between an open habitat (e.g., savannah-mosaics) and increased terrestriality is central to hypotheses of hominin evolution, especially the emergence and evolution of bipedalism, as well as ape evolution as far back as the early Miocene. However, the selective pressures that act on apes in an open habitat remain poorly understood. Observations of chimpanzees that live in savannah-mosaics, analogous to some reconstructed hominoid palaeohabitats, can provide valuable insight into the behavioural adaptations of a large-bodied, semi-arboreal ape to an open habitat, characterised by sparsely distributed food sources and a broken canopy. We previously showed that savannah-dwelling chimpanzees in the Issa Valley, western Tanzania, maintain a high level of arboreality, and particularly suspensory behaviour, largely associated with foraging. Here, we investigate how chimpanzee foraging strategy in a savannah-mosaic may drive a high frequency of arboreal behaviours despite reduced arboreal pathways. Specifically, we hypothesized that Issa chimpanzees would spend more time foraging (and moving) per tree to maximize utilization of food in a sparse landscape. This foraging strategy would be facilitated by foraging in trees with large crowns and abundant terminal-branch foods, which are characteristic of miombo woodlands. However, the link between foraging positional behaviour and tree structure remains understudied.MethodsWe collected data on arboreal foraging behaviour and corresponding tree structural characteristics over five months in the dry season, and used generalized linear mixed models to test for any effect of food type and tree structural characteristics on (1) duration of foraging bouts, (2) frequency of locomotion, and (3) use of suspensory behaviour.ResultsWe found that food types and tree structures found in woodland vegetation are associated with more time spent in foraging trees, a higher rate of locomotion, and the use of suspension in particular.DiscussionOur results suggest that arboreal, and especially suspensory, locomotion can be advantageous for foraging in a savannah-mosaic and not just closed forest habitats. These findings have implications for reconstructing hominoid positional behaviour from the fossil record and provide a model for how arboreality, and specifically suspensory behaviour, could have been an important part of the hominoid niche in savannah-mosaic habitats.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2025.1561078/fullhominin evolutionpositional behaviourdietsavannah-mosaicPan troglodyteshominoid
spellingShingle Rhianna C. Drummond-Clarke
Susan Chege Reuben
Fiona A. Stewart
Fiona A. Stewart
Fiona A. Stewart
Alex K. Piel
Alex K. Piel
Alex K. Piel
Tracy L. Kivell
Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
hominin evolution
positional behaviour
diet
savannah-mosaic
Pan troglodytes
hominoid
title Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees
title_full Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees
title_fullStr Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees
title_full_unstemmed Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees
title_short Foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees
title_sort foraging strategy and tree structure as drivers of arboreality and suspensory behaviour in savannah dwelling chimpanzees
topic hominin evolution
positional behaviour
diet
savannah-mosaic
Pan troglodytes
hominoid
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2025.1561078/full
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