The relationship between diet change and regurgitation and reingestion in captive chimpanzees

Publication date

2016

Authors

Mulder, I.
van der Meer, R.
de Vries, HanISNI 0000000389159300
Sterck, E. H. M.ISNI 0000000390024382

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Captive chimpanzees regularly show abnormal behaviour, including regurgitation and reingestion (R/R). R/R may have several causes, among them a suboptimal diet. For this reason, the effect of a diet change towards a more fibre-rich diet on R/R was studied in the Amersfoort Zoo chimpanzee group comprising 15 individuals. In addition, the relationship with self-directed behaviour, inactivity level and temperature, proxies of the alternative factors stress, boredom and crowding, were studied. Measures of stress and boredom did not show any correlation to R/R behaviour. The new diet did result in less R/R. However, the data could not conclusively dismiss temperature as a factor or confound in the reduction of R/R. Still, the R/R rate in three individuals that showed most R/R did not concur with temperature, countering an effect of temperature on R/R. Individuals that showed R/R in the study period still showed this behaviour several years later, suggesting that R/R may not be related to current welfare but possibly become a habit, where stress and R/R become dissociated and the behaviour persists in improved conditions and over time. This study shows that diet change can contribute to a reduction in R/R, yet this may not be due to the change of diet quality, but to the change in diet as such. The change in diet was not able to abolish R/R behaviour entirely for these chimpanzees.

Keywords

abnormal behaviour, boredom, fibre, inactivity, self-directed behaviour, stress

Citation

Mulder, I, van der Meer, R, de Vries, J & Sterck, E H M 2016, 'The relationship between diet change and regurgitation and reingestion in captive chimpanzees', Journal of Zoo and Aquarium Research, vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 196-201. https://doi.org/10.19227/jzar.v4i4.185