Investigating infant feeding development in wild chimpanzees using stable isotopes of naturally shed hair

Author:

Bădescu Iulia1ORCID,Curteanu Cassandra1,Sellen Daniel W.2,Watts David P.3ORCID,Katzenberg M. Anne4

Affiliation:

1. Département d'anthropologie Université de Montréal Montréal Québec Canada

2. Department of Anthropology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Department of Anthropology Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

4. Department of Anthropology and Archaeology University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractMeasuring the relative contributions of milk and non‐milk foods in the diets of primate infants is difficult from observations. Stable carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotopes in hair can be used to physiologically track infant feeding through development, but few wild studies have done so, likely due to the difficulty in collecting hair non‐invasively. We assessed infant feeding at different ages in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) at Ngogo, Uganda using δ13C and δ15N of keratin in 164 naturally shed hairs from 29 infants (61 hairs), 6 juveniles (7 hairs), 28 mothers (67 hairs) and 14 adult males (29 hairs). Hairs were collected when they stuck to feces during defecation or from the ground after chimpanzees groomed or rested. We could not distinguish between the hairs of infants and mothers using strand length and diameter. Infants 1–2 years old were most enriched in 13C and 15N and showed means of 1.1‰ in δ13C and 2.1‰ in δ15N above their mothers. Infants at 2 years had hair δ13C values like those of their mothers, which suggests infants began relying more heavily on plants around this age. While mother‐infant δ13C and δ15N differences generally decreased with offspring age, as is expected when infants rely increasingly more on independent foraging through development, milk seemed to remain an important dietary component for infants older than 2.5 years, as evidenced by continuing elevated δ15N. We showed that stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes in naturally shed hairs can feasibly detect trophic level differences between chimpanzee infants and mothers. Since it can mitigate some of the limitations associated with behavioral and fecal stable isotope data, the use of hair stable isotopes is a useful, non‐invasive tool for assessing infant feeding development in wild primates.

Funder

University of Toronto

Université de Montréal

Explorers Club

Leakey Foundation

Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et technologies

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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