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Olive baboon

The olive baboon (Papio anubis), also called the Anubis baboon, is a member of the family Cercopithecidae Old World monkeys. The species is the most wide-ranging of all baboons,[3] being native to 25 countries throughout Africa, extending from Mali eastward to Ethiopia[4] and Tanzania. Isolated populations are also present in some mountainous regions of the Sahara.[3] It inhabits savannahs, steppes, and forests.[3] The common name is derived from its coat colour, which is a shade of green-grey at a distance. A variety of communications, vocal and non-vocal, facilitate a complex social structure.

Olive baboon
In the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Family: Cercopithecidae
Genus: Papio
Species:
P. anubis[1]
Binomial name
Papio anubis[1]
(Lesson, 1827)
     Geographic range

Characteristics edit

 
Skulls of a male (left) and female (right)

The olive baboon is named for its coat, which, at a distance, is a shade of green-grey.[5] At closer range, its coat is multicoloured, due to rings of yellow-brown and black on the hairs.[6] The hair on the baboon's face is coarser and ranges from dark grey to black.[5] This coloration is shared by both sexes, although males have a mane of longer hair that tapers down to ordinary length along the back.[3]

Besides the mane, the male olive baboon differs from the female in terms of weight, body and canine tooth size; males are, on average, 70 cm (28 in) tall while standing and females measure 60 cm (24 in) in height.[7] The olive baboon is one of the largest species of monkey; only the chacma baboon and the mandrill attain similar sizes.[8] The head-and-body length can range from 50 to 114 cm (20 to 45 in), with a species average of around 85 cm (33 in). At the shoulder on all fours, females average 55 cm (22 in) against males, which average 70 cm (28 in). The typical weight range for both sexes is reportedly 10–37 kg (22–82 lb), with males averaging 24 kg (53 lb) and females averaging 14.7 kg (32 lb). Some males may weigh as much as 50 kg (110 lb).[9][10]

Like other baboons, the olive baboon has an elongated, dog-like muzzle.[3] Its 38 to 58 cm (15 to 23 in) long tail and four-legged gait can make it seem canine.[11] The tail almost looks as if it is broken, as it is erect for the first quarter, after which it drops down sharply.[5] The bare patch of a baboon's rump is smaller in the olive baboon than in the Hamadryas baboon or Guinea baboon.[3] The olive baboon, like most cercopithecines, has a cheek pouch with which to store food.[12]

Distribution and habitat edit

The species inhabits a strip of 25 equatorial African countries, very nearly ranging from the east to west coasts of the continent.[12] The exact boundaries of this strip are not clearly defined, as the species' territory overlaps with that of other baboon species.[5] In many places, this has resulted in cross-breeding between species.[5] For example, considerable hybridisation has occurred between the olive baboon and the hamadryas baboon in Ethiopia.[11] Cross-breeding with the yellow baboon and the Guinea baboon has also been observed.[5] Although this has been noted, the hybrids have not as yet been well studied.[5]

Throughout its wide range, the olive baboon can be found in a number of different habitats.[3] It is usually classified as savannah-dwelling, living in the wide plains of the grasslands.[13] The grasslands, especially those near open woodland, do make up a large part of its habitat, but the baboon also inhabits rainforests and deserts.[3] Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, for instance, both support olive baboon populations in dense tropical forests.[5]

Behaviour and ecology edit

 
By climbing trees, individuals can act as a lookout to detect predators.

Social structure edit

The olive baboon lives in groups of 15 to 150, made up of a few males, many females, and their young.[14] Each baboon has a social ranking somewhere in the group, depending on its dominance.[14] Female dominance is hereditary, with daughters having nearly the same rank as their mothers,[14][15] and adult females forming the core of the social system.[15] Female relatives form their own subgroups in the troop.[14] Related females are largely friendly to each other. They tend to stay close together and groom one another, and team up in aggressive encounters within the troop.[15] Female kin form these strong bonds because they do not emigrate from their natal groups.[16]

Occasionally, groups may split up when they become so large that competition for resources is problematic, but even then, members of matrilines tend to stick together.[16] Dominant females procure more food, matings, and supporters. Among olive baboons in Tanzania, high-ranking females give birth at shorter intervals to infants with a higher survival rate, and their daughters tend to mature faster than low-ranking females.[16] These high-ranking females also appear to have a higher probability of miscarriages and some high-ranking matrilines have inexplicably low fertility.[16] One theory suggests this occurs due to stress on the high-ranking females, although this theory is controversial.[16] A recent study shows top-ranking females are at risk from male harassment. Males who have recently immigrated harass females in order to induce miscarriages in females they had not yet mated with, in order to impregnate them with an offspring that is his own faster. As females with living infants often have male allies protecting their infants, it makes more sense for a male to ignore infants and channel his aggression to the group's resident pregnant females who do not currently have infants instead.[17]

 
Troop in Kenya

A female often forms a long-lasting social relationship with a male in her troop, known as a "friendship".[15] These nonsexual affiliative friendships benefit both the male and female.[16] Males benefit from these relationships because they are usually formed soon after he immigrates into a new group,[16] and helps the male integrate into the group more easily.[16] He could also potentially end up mating with his female friend in the future.[16] Females gain protection from threats to themselves and their infants (if they have any).[16] Males occasionally "baby-sit" for their female friends, so she can feed and forage freely without the burden of having to carry or watch the infant.[16] Sexually receptive females and newly immigrated males can form such friendships.[14] These relationships are sometimes enduring and the pair grooms and remains close to each other.[14] They also travel, forage, sleep, and raise infants together, as well as fight together against aggressive conspecifics.[15]

Females with high social ranks even forge friendships with multiple males at once. Another advantage of these friendships is it enables females to gain protection from the unwanted advances of males aiming to mate with them. A female who finds a male undesirable can simply rebuff his advances by calling on her male friends to chase him away, and can therefore enjoy exerting her reproductive skew. While infanticide is a reproductive strategy in males, it is costly for females, which would also explain why infanticide is a rare occurrence in olive baboons yet can be the principal cause of infant mortality in many other baboon subspecies: high-ranking females can simply rebuff a male threatening her infant, making infant-targeted aggression a reproductive disadvantage in olive baboons. This also explains the reason male olive baboons use infants as shields in aggressive encounters.[18]

Males establish their dominance more forcefully than females.[14] A male disperses,[16] or leaves his natal group and joins another group, after reaching sexual maturity.[14] Adult males are very competitive with each other and fight for access to females.[15] Higher dominance means better access to mating and earlier access to food, so naturally a great deal of fighting over rank occurs, with younger males constantly trying to rise in position.[14] Because females stay with their groups their entire lives, and males emigrate to others, often a new male challenges an older one for dominance.[14] Frequently, when older baboons drop in the social hierarchy, they move to another tribe.[3] The younger males who pushed them down often bully and harass them.[3] Older males tend to have more supportive and equal relationships than those of the younger males. The former may form coalitions against the latter.[19]

Despite being hierarchical, baboons appear to be "democratic" when it comes to deciding the direction of collective movement. Individuals are more likely to follow when multiple decision-makers agree on what direction to go rather than simply following dominant individuals.[20]

Reproduction and parenting edit

 
Female with suckling young
 
Female with baby in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda

Females are sexually mature at seven to eight years old, and males at seven to 10 years.[3] The beginning of a female's ovulation is a signal to the males that she is ready to mate. During ovulation, the skin of the female's anogenital area swells and turns a bright red/pink.[21] The swelling makes it difficult to move and increases the female's chance of microbial or parasitic infection.[21] Females with more swollen anogenital areas reproduce while younger, produce more offspring per year, and those offspring have a better chance of surviving. These females also attract more males, and are more likely to cause aggressive fights between them.[14] Olive baboons tend to mate promiscuously.[14] A male forms a mating consortship with an estrous female, staying close to and copulating with her.[22] Males guard their partner against any other male trying to mate with her. Unless a female is in a multiday consortship, she often copulates with more than one male each day.[23] Multiple copulations are not necessary for reproduction, but may function to make the actual paternity of the female's offspring ambiguous. This lack of paternal certainty could help reduce the occurrence of infanticide.[3] Occasionally, male olive baboons monopolize a female for her entire period of probable conception.[23] The male protects his female from being mated by other males during consortship.[24]

 
Adult grooming young in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area

Newborns have black natal coats and bright pink skin. Females are the primary caregivers of infants, but males also play a role.[14] In its first few days, the infant may be unable to stay attached to its mother and relies on her for physical support. Its grasp grows stronger by its first week and it is able to cling to its mother's fur by itself.[14] By two weeks, the infant begins to explore its surroundings for short periods, but stays near her. The distance the infant spends away from its mother increases the older it gets.[25] In general, higher-ranking females are usually more relaxed parents than females of lower rank, which usually keep their offspring close to them.[3] This difference lasts for approximately the first eight weeks of an infant's life.[3] Olive baboons do not seem to practise co-operative parenting, but a female may groom an infant that is not hers. Subadult and juvenile females are more likely to care for another's young, as they have not yet produced offspring of their own.[3] One theory for why immature females tend to seek out infants is that they can prepare for their future roles as mothers.[16] Infant baboons born to first-time mothers suffer higher mortality than those born to experienced mothers, which suggests that prior experience in caring for infants is important.[16] Adult males in the groups also care for the infants, as they are likely to be related to them.[26] Males groom infants, reducing the amount of parasites they may have, and calm them when they are stressed. They may also protect them from predators, such as chimpanzees. Adult males exploit infants and often use them as shields to reduce the likelihood that other males will threaten them.[26]

Communication edit

 
Face of an olive baboon

Olive baboons communicate with various vocalizations and facial expressions. Throughout the day, baboons of all ages emit the "basic grunt".[27] Adults give a range of calls. The "roargrunt" is made by adult males displaying to each other. The "cough-bark", and the "cough geck" are made when low-flying birds or humans they do not know are sighted. A "wa-hoo" call is made in response to predators or neighbouring groups at night and during stressful situations.[27] Other vocalizations include "broken grunting" (low-volume, quick series of grunts made during relatively calm aggressive encounters), "pant-grunts" (made when aggressive encounters escalate), "shrill barks" (loud calls given when potential threats appear suddenly), and "screams" (continuous high-pitch sounds responding to strong emotions).[27] The most common facial expression of the olive baboon is "lipsmacking", which is associated with a number of behaviours.[14] "Ear flattening", "eyes narrowed", "head shaking", "jaw-clapping", lipsmacking, and "tongue protrusion" are used when baboons are greeting each other, and are sometimes made with a "rear present".[27] "Eyebrow raising", "molar grinding", "staring", and "yawning" are used to threaten other baboons.[14] A submissive baboon responds with displays such as the "fear grin", the "rigid crouch", and "tail erect".[27]

Diet edit

 
Foraging in Kenya

One major reason for its widespread success is that the olive baboon is omnivorous and like other baboons, will eat practically anything.[5] As such, it is able to find nutrition in almost any environment and is able to adapt with different foraging tactics.[28] For instance, the olive baboon in grassland goes about finding food differently from one in a forest.[5] The baboon forages on all levels of an environment, above and beneath the ground and in the canopy of forests.[28] Most animals only look for food at one level; an arboreal species such as a lemur does not look for food on the ground. The olive baboon searches as wide an area as it can, and it eats virtually everything it finds.[28]

The diet typically includes a large variety of plants, and invertebrates and small mammals, as well as birds.[29] The olive baboon eats leaves, grass, roots, bark, flowers, fruit, lichens, tubers, seeds, mushrooms, corms, and rhizomes.[29] Corms and rhizomes are especially important in times of drought, because grass loses a great deal of its nutritional value.[29] In dry, arid regions, such as the northeastern deserts, small invertebrates like insects, grubs, worms, spiders, and scorpions fill out its diet.[29]

The olive baboon also actively hunts prey, such as small rodents, birds and other primates.[5] Its limit is usually small antelope, such as Thomson's gazelle, but will also kill sheep, goats, and chickens from farms, which may amount to around one third of its food from hunting.[5] Hunting is usually a group activity, with both males and females participating.[5] This systematic predation was apparently developed recently.[30] In a field study, such behaviour was observed as starting with the males of one troop and spreading through all ages and sexes.[30]

In Eritrea, the olive baboon has formed a symbiotic relationship with that country's endangered elephant population. The baboons use the water holes dug by the elephants, while the elephants use the tree-top baboons as an early warning system.[31]

Conservation status edit

The olive baboon is listed as least concern on the IUCN Red List because it is widespread with a large global population and not threatened by a range-wide population decline.[2] Competition and disease have possibly led to fewer baboons in closed forests. Like most other baboon species, it is routinely exterminated as a pest for crop raiding and small livestock predation.[32][33]

References edit

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  30. ^ a b Strum, S C. (1975). "Primate Predation: Interim Report on the Development of a Tradition in a Troop of Olive Baboons". Science. 187 (4178): 755–7. Bibcode:1975Sci...187..755S. doi:10.1126/science.187.4178.755. PMID 17795248. S2CID 39585204.
  31. ^ . BBC Wildlife magazine. 2003. Archived from the original on 2006-03-14. Retrieved 2007-09-28.
  32. ^ Kifle, Zewdu (12 September 2021). "Human-olive baboon (Papio anubis) conflict in the human-modified landscape, Wollo, Ethiopia". Global Ecology and Conservation. 31: e01820. doi:10.1016/j.gecco.2021.e01820. S2CID 239181240.
  33. ^ RIPPLE, WILLIAM J. (10 January 2014). "Status and Ecological Effects of the World's Largest Carnivores". Science. 343 (6167). doi:10.1126/science.1241484. PMID 24408439. S2CID 206550298. Baboons pose the greatest threat to livestock and crops in sub-Saharan Africa.

External links edit

olive, baboon, olive, baboon, papio, anubis, also, called, anubis, baboon, member, family, cercopithecidae, world, monkeys, species, most, wide, ranging, baboons, being, native, countries, throughout, africa, extending, from, mali, eastward, ethiopia, tanzania. The olive baboon Papio anubis also called the Anubis baboon is a member of the family Cercopithecidae Old World monkeys The species is the most wide ranging of all baboons 3 being native to 25 countries throughout Africa extending from Mali eastward to Ethiopia 4 and Tanzania Isolated populations are also present in some mountainous regions of the Sahara 3 It inhabits savannahs steppes and forests 3 The common name is derived from its coat colour which is a shade of green grey at a distance A variety of communications vocal and non vocal facilitate a complex social structure Olive baboon In the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Tanzania Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 2 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Primates Suborder Haplorhini Infraorder Simiiformes Family Cercopithecidae Genus Papio Species P anubis 1 Binomial name Papio anubis 1 Lesson 1827 Geographic range Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Distribution and habitat 3 Behaviour and ecology 3 1 Social structure 3 2 Reproduction and parenting 3 3 Communication 3 4 Diet 4 Conservation status 5 References 6 External linksCharacteristics edit nbsp Skulls of a male left and female right The olive baboon is named for its coat which at a distance is a shade of green grey 5 At closer range its coat is multicoloured due to rings of yellow brown and black on the hairs 6 The hair on the baboon s face is coarser and ranges from dark grey to black 5 This coloration is shared by both sexes although males have a mane of longer hair that tapers down to ordinary length along the back 3 Besides the mane the male olive baboon differs from the female in terms of weight body and canine tooth size males are on average 70 cm 28 in tall while standing and females measure 60 cm 24 in in height 7 The olive baboon is one of the largest species of monkey only the chacma baboon and the mandrill attain similar sizes 8 The head and body length can range from 50 to 114 cm 20 to 45 in with a species average of around 85 cm 33 in At the shoulder on all fours females average 55 cm 22 in against males which average 70 cm 28 in The typical weight range for both sexes is reportedly 10 37 kg 22 82 lb with males averaging 24 kg 53 lb and females averaging 14 7 kg 32 lb Some males may weigh as much as 50 kg 110 lb 9 10 Like other baboons the olive baboon has an elongated dog like muzzle 3 Its 38 to 58 cm 15 to 23 in long tail and four legged gait can make it seem canine 11 The tail almost looks as if it is broken as it is erect for the first quarter after which it drops down sharply 5 The bare patch of a baboon s rump is smaller in the olive baboon than in the Hamadryas baboon or Guinea baboon 3 The olive baboon like most cercopithecines has a cheek pouch with which to store food 12 Distribution and habitat editThe species inhabits a strip of 25 equatorial African countries very nearly ranging from the east to west coasts of the continent 12 The exact boundaries of this strip are not clearly defined as the species territory overlaps with that of other baboon species 5 In many places this has resulted in cross breeding between species 5 For example considerable hybridisation has occurred between the olive baboon and the hamadryas baboon in Ethiopia 11 Cross breeding with the yellow baboon and the Guinea baboon has also been observed 5 Although this has been noted the hybrids have not as yet been well studied 5 Throughout its wide range the olive baboon can be found in a number of different habitats 3 It is usually classified as savannah dwelling living in the wide plains of the grasslands 13 The grasslands especially those near open woodland do make up a large part of its habitat but the baboon also inhabits rainforests and deserts 3 Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo for instance both support olive baboon populations in dense tropical forests 5 Behaviour and ecology edit nbsp By climbing trees individuals can act as a lookout to detect predators Social structure edit The olive baboon lives in groups of 15 to 150 made up of a few males many females and their young 14 Each baboon has a social ranking somewhere in the group depending on its dominance 14 Female dominance is hereditary with daughters having nearly the same rank as their mothers 14 15 and adult females forming the core of the social system 15 Female relatives form their own subgroups in the troop 14 Related females are largely friendly to each other They tend to stay close together and groom one another and team up in aggressive encounters within the troop 15 Female kin form these strong bonds because they do not emigrate from their natal groups 16 Occasionally groups may split up when they become so large that competition for resources is problematic but even then members of matrilines tend to stick together 16 Dominant females procure more food matings and supporters Among olive baboons in Tanzania high ranking females give birth at shorter intervals to infants with a higher survival rate and their daughters tend to mature faster than low ranking females 16 These high ranking females also appear to have a higher probability of miscarriages and some high ranking matrilines have inexplicably low fertility 16 One theory suggests this occurs due to stress on the high ranking females although this theory is controversial 16 A recent study shows top ranking females are at risk from male harassment Males who have recently immigrated harass females in order to induce miscarriages in females they had not yet mated with in order to impregnate them with an offspring that is his own faster As females with living infants often have male allies protecting their infants it makes more sense for a male to ignore infants and channel his aggression to the group s resident pregnant females who do not currently have infants instead 17 nbsp Troop in Kenya A female often forms a long lasting social relationship with a male in her troop known as a friendship 15 These nonsexual affiliative friendships benefit both the male and female 16 Males benefit from these relationships because they are usually formed soon after he immigrates into a new group 16 and helps the male integrate into the group more easily 16 He could also potentially end up mating with his female friend in the future 16 Females gain protection from threats to themselves and their infants if they have any 16 Males occasionally baby sit for their female friends so she can feed and forage freely without the burden of having to carry or watch the infant 16 Sexually receptive females and newly immigrated males can form such friendships 14 These relationships are sometimes enduring and the pair grooms and remains close to each other 14 They also travel forage sleep and raise infants together as well as fight together against aggressive conspecifics 15 Females with high social ranks even forge friendships with multiple males at once Another advantage of these friendships is it enables females to gain protection from the unwanted advances of males aiming to mate with them A female who finds a male undesirable can simply rebuff his advances by calling on her male friends to chase him away and can therefore enjoy exerting her reproductive skew While infanticide is a reproductive strategy in males it is costly for females which would also explain why infanticide is a rare occurrence in olive baboons yet can be the principal cause of infant mortality in many other baboon subspecies high ranking females can simply rebuff a male threatening her infant making infant targeted aggression a reproductive disadvantage in olive baboons This also explains the reason male olive baboons use infants as shields in aggressive encounters 18 Males establish their dominance more forcefully than females 14 A male disperses 16 or leaves his natal group and joins another group after reaching sexual maturity 14 Adult males are very competitive with each other and fight for access to females 15 Higher dominance means better access to mating and earlier access to food so naturally a great deal of fighting over rank occurs with younger males constantly trying to rise in position 14 Because females stay with their groups their entire lives and males emigrate to others often a new male challenges an older one for dominance 14 Frequently when older baboons drop in the social hierarchy they move to another tribe 3 The younger males who pushed them down often bully and harass them 3 Older males tend to have more supportive and equal relationships than those of the younger males The former may form coalitions against the latter 19 Despite being hierarchical baboons appear to be democratic when it comes to deciding the direction of collective movement Individuals are more likely to follow when multiple decision makers agree on what direction to go rather than simply following dominant individuals 20 Reproduction and parenting edit nbsp Female with suckling young nbsp Female with baby in Queen Elizabeth National Park Uganda Females are sexually mature at seven to eight years old and males at seven to 10 years 3 The beginning of a female s ovulation is a signal to the males that she is ready to mate During ovulation the skin of the female s anogenital area swells and turns a bright red pink 21 The swelling makes it difficult to move and increases the female s chance of microbial or parasitic infection 21 Females with more swollen anogenital areas reproduce while younger produce more offspring per year and those offspring have a better chance of surviving These females also attract more males and are more likely to cause aggressive fights between them 14 Olive baboons tend to mate promiscuously 14 A male forms a mating consortship with an estrous female staying close to and copulating with her 22 Males guard their partner against any other male trying to mate with her Unless a female is in a multiday consortship she often copulates with more than one male each day 23 Multiple copulations are not necessary for reproduction but may function to make the actual paternity of the female s offspring ambiguous This lack of paternal certainty could help reduce the occurrence of infanticide 3 Occasionally male olive baboons monopolize a female for her entire period of probable conception 23 The male protects his female from being mated by other males during consortship 24 nbsp Adult grooming young in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Newborns have black natal coats and bright pink skin Females are the primary caregivers of infants but males also play a role 14 In its first few days the infant may be unable to stay attached to its mother and relies on her for physical support Its grasp grows stronger by its first week and it is able to cling to its mother s fur by itself 14 By two weeks the infant begins to explore its surroundings for short periods but stays near her The distance the infant spends away from its mother increases the older it gets 25 In general higher ranking females are usually more relaxed parents than females of lower rank which usually keep their offspring close to them 3 This difference lasts for approximately the first eight weeks of an infant s life 3 Olive baboons do not seem to practise co operative parenting but a female may groom an infant that is not hers Subadult and juvenile females are more likely to care for another s young as they have not yet produced offspring of their own 3 One theory for why immature females tend to seek out infants is that they can prepare for their future roles as mothers 16 Infant baboons born to first time mothers suffer higher mortality than those born to experienced mothers which suggests that prior experience in caring for infants is important 16 Adult males in the groups also care for the infants as they are likely to be related to them 26 Males groom infants reducing the amount of parasites they may have and calm them when they are stressed They may also protect them from predators such as chimpanzees Adult males exploit infants and often use them as shields to reduce the likelihood that other males will threaten them 26 Communication edit nbsp Face of an olive baboon Olive baboons communicate with various vocalizations and facial expressions Throughout the day baboons of all ages emit the basic grunt 27 Adults give a range of calls The roargrunt is made by adult males displaying to each other The cough bark and the cough geck are made when low flying birds or humans they do not know are sighted A wa hoo call is made in response to predators or neighbouring groups at night and during stressful situations 27 Other vocalizations include broken grunting low volume quick series of grunts made during relatively calm aggressive encounters pant grunts made when aggressive encounters escalate shrill barks loud calls given when potential threats appear suddenly and screams continuous high pitch sounds responding to strong emotions 27 The most common facial expression of the olive baboon is lipsmacking which is associated with a number of behaviours 14 Ear flattening eyes narrowed head shaking jaw clapping lipsmacking and tongue protrusion are used when baboons are greeting each other and are sometimes made with a rear present 27 Eyebrow raising molar grinding staring and yawning are used to threaten other baboons 14 A submissive baboon responds with displays such as the fear grin the rigid crouch and tail erect 27 Diet edit nbsp Foraging in Kenya One major reason for its widespread success is that the olive baboon is omnivorous and like other baboons will eat practically anything 5 As such it is able to find nutrition in almost any environment and is able to adapt with different foraging tactics 28 For instance the olive baboon in grassland goes about finding food differently from one in a forest 5 The baboon forages on all levels of an environment above and beneath the ground and in the canopy of forests 28 Most animals only look for food at one level an arboreal species such as a lemur does not look for food on the ground The olive baboon searches as wide an area as it can and it eats virtually everything it finds 28 The diet typically includes a large variety of plants and invertebrates and small mammals as well as birds 29 The olive baboon eats leaves grass roots bark flowers fruit lichens tubers seeds mushrooms corms and rhizomes 29 Corms and rhizomes are especially important in times of drought because grass loses a great deal of its nutritional value 29 In dry arid regions such as the northeastern deserts small invertebrates like insects grubs worms spiders and scorpions fill out its diet 29 The olive baboon also actively hunts prey such as small rodents birds and other primates 5 Its limit is usually small antelope such as Thomson s gazelle but will also kill sheep goats and chickens from farms which may amount to around one third of its food from hunting 5 Hunting is usually a group activity with both males and females participating 5 This systematic predation was apparently developed recently 30 In a field study such behaviour was observed as starting with the males of one troop and spreading through all ages and sexes 30 In Eritrea the olive baboon has formed a symbiotic relationship with that country s endangered elephant population The baboons use the water holes dug by the elephants while the elephants use the tree top baboons as an early warning system 31 Conservation status editThe olive baboon is listed as least concern on the IUCN Red List because it is widespread with a large global population and not threatened by a range wide population decline 2 Competition and disease have possibly led to fewer baboons in closed forests Like most other baboon species it is routinely exterminated as a pest for crop raiding and small livestock predation 32 33 References edit Groves C P 2005 Order Primates In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 166 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b Wallis J 2020 Papio anubis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T40647A17953200 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 2 RLTS T40647A17953200 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Shefferly N 2004 Papio anubis Animal Diversity Web Retrieved 2007 01 27 Aerts R 2019 Forest and woodland vegetation in the highlands of Dogu a Tembien In Nyssen J Jacob M Frankl A Eds Geo trekking in Ethiopia s Tropical Mountains The Dogu a Tembien District SpringerNature ISBN 978 3 030 04954 6 Retrieved 18 June 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cawthon Lang K A 2006 Primate Factsheets Olive baboon Papio anubis Taxonomy Morphology amp Ecology Retrieved 2007 01 27 Rowe N 1996 The Pictorial Guide to the Living Primates East Hampton NY Pogonias Press ISBN 0 9648825 0 7 Fleagle J 1999 Primate Adaptation and Evolution Second ed San Diego Academic Press pp 195 197 ISBN 0 12 260341 9 Dechow P C 1983 Estimation of body weights from craniometric variables in baboons PDF American Journal of Physical Anthropology 60 1 113 123 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330600116 hdl 2027 42 37620 PMID 6869499 Burnie D and Wilson DE Eds Animal The Definitive Visual Guide to the World s Wildlife DK Adult 2005 ISBN 0 7894 7764 5 Kingdon J 1993 Kingdon Guide to African Mammals Guinness Superlatives ISBN 978 0 85112 235 9 a b Nagel U 1973 A Comparison of Anubis baboons Hamadryas baboons and their hybrids at a species border in Ethiopia Folia Primatology 19 2 3 104 165 doi 10 1159 000155536 PMID 4201907 a b Groves C 2001 Primate Taxonomy Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 1 56098 872 X Rowell T E 1966 Forest living baboons in Uganda J Zool 149 3 344 365 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1966 tb04054 x a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Cawthon Lang KA 2006 04 18 Primate Factsheets Olive baboon Papio anubis Behavior Retrieved 2007 01 27 a b c d e f Smuts Barbara 1985 Sex and Friendship in Baboons New York Aldine Publications ISBN 978 0 202 02027 3 Retrieved 28 April 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Strier Karen 2011 Primate Behavioral Ecology 4th ed Upper Saddle River Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 205 79017 3 coss 2021 04 05 Baboons Behaving Badly Inquiry Office of the Vice President for Research Retrieved 2021 08 18 Lemasson A Palombit R A Jubin R 2008 04 01 Friendships between males and lactating females in a free ranging group of olive baboons Papio hamadryas anubis evidence from playback experiments Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 62 6 1027 1035 doi 10 1007 s00265 007 0530 z ISSN 1432 0762 S2CID 14614177 Smuts B B Watanabe J M 1990 Social relationships and ritualised greetings in adult male baboons Papio cynocephalus anubis PDF Int J Primatol 11 2 147 172 doi 10 1007 BF02192786 hdl 2027 42 44558 S2CID 33003545 Strandburg Peshkin Ariana Farine Damien R Couzin Iain D Crofoot Margaret C 2015 Shared decision making drives collective movement in wild baboons Science 348 624 1358 1361 Bibcode 2015Sci 348 1358S doi 10 1126 science aaa5099 PMC 4801504 PMID 26089514 a b Motluk Alison 2001 Big Bottom New Scientist 19 7 Packer C 1979 Inter troop transfer and inbreeding avoidance in Papio anubis Anim Behav 27 1 1 36 doi 10 1016 0003 3472 79 90126 X S2CID 53153239 a b Steven Leigh Larissa Swedell eds 2006 Reproduction and Fitness in Baboons Behavioral Ecological and Life History Perspective New York Springer Science Business Media LLC p 28 ISBN 0 387 30688 9 Bercovitch F B 1991 Mate selection consortship formation and reproductive tactics in adult female savanna baboons Primates 32 4 437 452 doi 10 1007 BF02381935 S2CID 19938813 Nash L T 1978 The development of the mother infant relationship in wild baboons Papio anubis Anim Behav 26 3 746 759 doi 10 1016 0003 3472 78 90141 0 S2CID 53190771 a b Packer C 1980 Male care and exploitation of infants in Papio anubis Anim Behav 28 2 512 520 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 80 80059 5 S2CID 53180751 a b c d e Ransom TW 1981 Beach troop of the Gombe East Brunswick NJ Assoc Univ Press ISBN 0 8387 1704 7 a b c Whiten A Byrne R W Barton R A Waterman P G Henzi S P 1991 Dietary and foraging strategies of baboons Philos Trans R Soc Lond 334 1270 187 197 doi 10 1098 rstb 1991 0108 PMID 1685577 a b c d Skelton S Savanna Baboon Papio cynocephalusd Retrieved 2007 01 29 permanent dead link a b Strum S C 1975 Primate Predation Interim Report on the Development of a Tradition in a Troop of Olive Baboons Science 187 4178 755 7 Bibcode 1975Sci 187 755S doi 10 1126 science 187 4178 755 PMID 17795248 S2CID 39585204 The rediscovery of Eritrea s elephants BBC Wildlife magazine 2003 Archived from the original on 2006 03 14 Retrieved 2007 09 28 Kifle Zewdu 12 September 2021 Human olive baboon Papio anubis conflict in the human modified landscape Wollo Ethiopia Global Ecology and Conservation 31 e01820 doi 10 1016 j gecco 2021 e01820 S2CID 239181240 RIPPLE WILLIAM J 10 January 2014 Status and Ecological Effects of the World s Largest Carnivores Science 343 6167 doi 10 1126 science 1241484 PMID 24408439 S2CID 206550298 Baboons pose the greatest threat to livestock and crops in sub Saharan Africa External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Papio anubis nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Papio anubis View the papAnu2 genome assembly in the UCSC Genome Browser Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olive baboon amp oldid 1217574221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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