M Sc Dissertation(WII)
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Item Responses of Raninforest Lizard Communities to Tea Plantation Edges in the Anamalai Hills of Southern Western Ghats India(Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, 2013) Malgaonkar, Aditya, S.; Habib, Bilal; Vasudevan, KarthikeyanHuman-made edges are an omnipresent form of altered habitats across the entire Western Ghats landscape. Furthermore a diverse range of edge types exist differing in the structure and composition of their altered surrounding habitat. Only a few attempts have been made to study the influence of the structure of this adjoining habitat or the 'matrix' on edge effects. Understanding the influence of different matrix habitats on edges will lead to the better understanding of the abiotic and biotic influences of the matrix on forest edges. Vegetation structure and composition has been the subject of several studies pertaining to fragmentation as well as effects of edges and both primary as well as secondary responses to edge effects have been documented. It has also been noted that while the reduction in plant species richness may occur as a result of decreasing forest area, it is more likely that this could be the result of increasing perimeter to area ratio resulting from fragmentation and increased proportion of area exposed to edge effects. The abiotic as well as biotic changes which affect vegetation not only bring about structural changes such as those in canopy cover, vertical stratification, density etc, but also affect functional aspects of plant communities such as pollination, seed dispersal and germination. Faunal communities respond in various ways to changes in their habitat; these may include changes in abundance, species richness, structure and composition of communities as well as behaviour of individual species. With respect to edge effect these changes or may vary in their magnitude and the distance or depth to which they penetrate into the interior. Magnitude and depth of influence are two complementary but distinct aspects of edge effects. Magnitl1de of influence is the degree to which a response value (a biotic or abiotic variable used to measure edge effects) differs between the edge and the interior while depth of influence if the maximum distance to which edge effects percolate into a habitat. However. A large amount of research on this topic has been restricted to birds and mammals and the responses shown by them might not be representative of the responses of other lesser known taxa.Item Social Behaviour and Communication Among Wild Lion-Tailed Macaque (Macaca silenus) in the Indira Ganghi Wildlife Sanctuary, Tamil Nadu(Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, 2001) Raghavan, Roopali; Gupta, A.K.; Johnsingh, A.J.T.This study on the social behaviour and communication among wild lion-tailed macaque was carried out between November 2000 and April 2001, on a group of lion-tailed macaques that inhabit the wet evergreen Puthutotam forest fragment. located within the Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary in the Anaimalai hills, Tamil Nadu.The troop consisted of 16 to 19 animals. For the purpose of this study, social interactions within and between adults and subadults of both sexes were considered. Focal animal sampling and instantaneous scan sampling was thus conducted on only ten identified individuals (four males and six females) in the troop. A complete ethogram describing all behaviour observed during the period of the study was repared. The time-activity budget was calculated for the troop. The predominant behavioural states among all the individuals were Active Forage (mean ± SD of 22.4 ± 0.08%), Active Feed (17.0 ± 0.05%), Sit (16.6 ± 0.04%), Move (13 ± 0.030/0), Passive Forage (6.8 ± 0.02%) and Passive Feed (6.5 ± 0.02%). The adult males and females of the study troop differed in the proportion of time spent by them in the different behavioural states. Autogroom and Allogroom accounted for the principal difference between the sexes. Adult males spent relatively greater time Autogrooming than females, while females allogroomed relatively more. Dominance ranks were calculated independently for males and females in the study troop. Among both males and females, rank position in the dominance hierarchy appeared to be influenced strongly by body size. This is an unusual finding for the females of cercopithecine primate species, implying the existence of an unique individual-based dominance hierarchy among the study females. There was i.e remarkable similarity in the frequency with which dominant and subordinate females displayed virtually all behaviours towards each other in dyadic interactions. This provides support to the prevailing view that lion-tailed macaques indeed display an egalitarian nature. Classification of the gestures and vocalisations were observed to be largely dependent on the dominance rank of the individuals. with certain gestures being characteristic of submission. Males and females showed differential use of the gestures and expressions.