Wild chimpanzees in Bugoma Forest, Uganda follow the Ugandan feeding ecology etiquette but exhibit cultural singularities: a case for the cultural junction hypothesis
Wild chimpanzees in Bugoma Forest, Uganda follow the Ugandan feeding ecology etiquette but exhibit cultural singularities: a case for the cultural junction hypothesis
Mannion, K. R.; Hobaiter, C.; Gruber, T.
AbstractChimpanzees, amongst other primates, are characterized by the large variability of habitats they can be found in as well as a large behavioral, sometimes cultural diversity. Such observations have launched a decades-long debate on the roots of behavioral diversity, stressing the need to document this behavioral variability in context, such as by connecting closely related populations through localized analyses. This study presents the first comprehensive description of feeding ecology from the Mwera South chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) community in the Bugoma Central Forest Reserve, in Uganda, establishing a valuable baseline for this previously unstudied population and providing a comparative perspective on the populations of Western Uganda and Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. By employing multiple methodological approaches, including direct observation and fecal analysis, we describe dietary composition, seasonal patterns, and environmental influences on feeding behavior. Characterizing the feeding ecology of this previously unstudied population is critical for examining how ecological factors might influence how feeding patterns evolve depending on resource availability or chimpanzee behavior, in particular by favoring analyses at the regional level. In addition, we can better evaluate to what extent behavioral differences between chimpanzee communities stem from ecological constraints and/or cultural transmission pathways. Our findings suggest that the Bugoma chimpanzees seat at the location of a historic cultural junction, opening a large array of questions about historic movements and cultural diffusion in Eastern chimpanzees.