AI Article Synopsis

  • Coat and body mass condition can serve as a noninvasive indicator of primate health, reflecting seasonal changes, resource use, and reproductive states.
  • A study of 36 wild Lemur catta revealed that coat quality improved during the wet season but worsened in the dry season, with increased alopecia observed during certain months.
  • While body condition generally remained stable, females with infants showed reduced body size compared to those without, highlighting the importance of visual assessments for monitoring health related to environmental factors and reproduction.

Article Abstract

Coat and body mass status provide a potential noninvasive way to assess primate health status as well as the effects of seasonality, resource use and reproductive state. Coat and body condition were scored visually for 36 wild Lemur catta at the Bezà Mahafaly Special Reserve, Madagascar, from July 2012 to March 2013. Coat quality generally increased during the wet season when resource availability increased, in contrast to that observed during the resource-depleted dry season. Alopecia frequency increased from June to December and declined between January and March. Sex differences for coat condition were only observed in January, when males had superior coat scores. Body condition did not vary by month or sex except in February, when males were larger than females. Females that birthed infants were of lower body size than individuals who did not for November and from January to March. Our results indicate visual methods effectively detect variability in coat and body condition related to seasonality and reproductive status. Such methods present a noninvasive means for assessing the impact of seasonal resource availability, stresses of infant care and reproductive state on ring-tailed lemurs, and may be useful for assessing the impacts of these factors on general health status.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000368574DOI Listing

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