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Featured researches published by Mohamed Qarro.


Primates | 2011

Dietary adaptations of temperate primates : comparisons of Japanese and Barbary macaques

Goro Hanya; Nelly Ménard; Mohamed Qarro; Mohamed Ibn Tattou; Mieko Fuse; Dominique Vallet; Aya Yamada; Moe Go; Hino Takafumi; Riyou Tsujino; Naoki Agetsuma; Kazuo Wada

Habitat, diet and leaf chemistry are compared between Japanese and Barbary macaques to reveal the similarities and differences in dietary adaptations of temperate primates living at the eastern and western extremes of the genus Macaca. Tree species diversity and proportion of fleshy-fruited species are much higher in Japan than in North Africa. Both species spend considerable annual feeding time on leaves. Japanese macaques prefer fruits and seeds over leaves, and Barbary macaques prefer seeds. These characteristics are adaptive in temperate regions where fruit availability varies considerably with season, since animals can survive during the lean period by relying on leaf and other vegetative foods. The two species are different with respect to the higher consumption of herbs by Barbary macaques, and the leaves consumed contain high condensed and hydrolysable tannin for Barbary but not for Japanese macaques. Barbary macaques supplement less diverse tree foods with herbs. Because of the low species diversity and high tannin content of the dominant tree species, Barbary macaques may have developed the capacity to cope with tannin. This supports the idea that digestion of leaves is indispensable to survive in temperate regions where fruit and seed foods are not available for a prolonged period during each year.


Primates | 2013

Effect of habitat quality on the ecological behaviour of a temperate-living primate: time-budget adjustments

Nelly Ménard; Peggy Motsch; Alexia Delahaye; Alice Saintvanne; Guillaume Le Flohic; Sandrine Dupé; Dominique Vallet; Mohamed Qarro; Jean-Sébastien Pierre

Barbary macaques, like other non-human primates living in highly seasonal temperate environments, display high monthly variations in their diet. In addition, their diet changes according to the habitat type they colonize and to the degree of habitat degradation due to resource exploitation by local people, in particular through pastoralism. We studied the time-budget adjustments of wild Barbary macaques in three cedar–oak forests impacted by different intensities of grazing pressure from goats and sheep. We examined how diet variations influenced the time monkeys spent in their activities and their day range lengths (i.e. their energy costs). At three studied sites, diet composition and time budgets showed marked seasonal variations. Diet composition had a strong influence on monkeys’ time budget. In the forest where pastoralism was the highest, diet included a greater proportion of underground resources, shrub fruit and acorns, which led to an increase in the time spent foraging and moving, as well as an important increase in day range lengths. Energy costs were therefore higher in a degraded environment than in a suitable habitat. The monkeys living in forests subjected to pastoralism took advantage of increased day lengths to spend more time searching for food. However, in the forest with the highest pastoralism pressure, although monkeys spent more time foraging, they spent less time feeding than monkeys at the other sites. In addition, they appeared to have reached the limits of the available time they could devote to these activities, as their diurnal resting time was at its lowest level over several months. Temperature variations did not appear to modify monkeys’ time budgets. In the least favourable habitat, saving time from resting activity allowed monkeys to maintain a relatively high level of social activity, partly linked to rearing constraints.


Anthrozoos | 2014

A comparison of body size, coat condition and endoparasite diversity of wild barbary macaques exposed to different levels of tourism

Chiara Borg; Bonaventura Majolo; Mohamed Qarro; Stuart Semple

ABSTRACT Primate tourism is a rapidly growing industry with the potential to provide considerable conservation benefits. However, assessing the impact of tourists on the animals involved is vital to ensure that the conservation value of primate tourism is maximized. In this study, we compared body size, coat condition, and endoparasite diversity of wild, adult Barbary macaques exposed to different levels of tourism. Study animals belonged to three groups located in the Middle Atlas Mountains, Morocco: “green group” (GG) and “scarlet group” (SG) were exposed to negligible/no tourism, while the “tourist group” (TG) was exposed to very high levels of tourism. We used photogrammetry to quantify body size, scored coat condition from photographs, and quantified endoparasite species number from fecal samples. For both males and females, TG animals had deeper stomachs and wider hips than SG and GG animals. The coat condition of TG males was worse than that of SG and GG males, but no difference between groups was seen for females. Fecal samples from TG males contained a greater mean number of protozoan species than did samples from SG and GG males; for females a similar difference was found between TG and GG, but not between TG and SG. This study provides evidence that tourism has impacts on the body size, coat condition, and endoparasite diversity of Barbary macaques at this site. Further study is required to assess whether such effects are detrimental to the health of these animals.


Oryx | 2014

Impact of human pressure and forest fragmentation on the Endangered Barbary macaque Macaca sylvanus in the Middle Atlas of Morocco

Nelly Ménard; Yann Rantier; Adrien Foulquier; Mohamed Qarro; Lahcen Chillasse; Dominique Vallet; Jean-Sébastien Pierre; Alain Butet

Overexploitation of forests by humans can lead to highly fragmented populations of forest-dependent species that have poor dispersal abilities. We tested the influence of habitat quality, landscape structure and human pressure on densities of the Barbary macaque Macaca sylvanus in the largest wild population, in the Middle Atlas of Morocco. We surveyed 14 forest fragments of 5–142 km 2 that are separated from each other by an inhospitable matrix. We estimated the habitat quality of these forest patches by analysing the vegetation structure and the intensity of human pressure. We studied the distribution of forest patches and estimated macaque densities by combining line-transect sampling and complete group counts. We estimated mean density of individuals to be 9 km −2 (range 0.2–23 km −2 ). Differentiation of forest patches by a principal component analysis did not show any significant relationship between vegetation type and macaque density. A linear regression model showed that human pressure had a negative impact on density and that density responded positively to patch size. Patch shape, connectivity and altitude did not explain variation in population density. The size of this population is estimated to be c. 5,000 individuals. The survival of several small subpopulations is seriously threatened. As the Middle Atlas is the stronghold of this Endangered species, we recommend modifying forestry practices, reducing overgrazing by livestock within forests, and halting clear-cutting of holm oaks.


Archive | 2013

Out of Asia: The Singular Case of the Barbary Macaque

Bonaventura Majolo; Els van Lavieren; Laëtitia Maréchal; Ann MacLarnon; Garry Marvin; Mohamed Qarro; Stuart Semple

The Barbary macaque (Macaca sylvanus) is the only species of the genus Macaca living outside Asia. Currently, two disjointed and highly fragmented populations of this species exist in the wild, in Morocco and Algeria. The Barbary macaque is listed as endangered in the IUCN 2010 Red List of Threatened Species and the total population size in the wild is estimated at between 5,000 and 6,000 individuals. Outside Africa, a free-ranging population of macaques inhabits the Rock of Gibraltar. The Barbary macaque can be considered a flagship species of the cedar and oak forests of Morocco and Algeria. Despite this, little is known about the population structure, ecology and behaviour of wild Barbary macaques. Scarce data exist on the effect of human activity on the conservation and behaviour of this species. In this chapter, we review the literature on wild Barbary macaques to describe their ecology and behaviour. We discuss the factors threatening the survival of this species, and the history of human-macaque interactions in Morocco and Algeria, as well as in Gibraltar. Moreover, we analyse the effect of tourist pressure on the behaviour of the Barbary macaque at our field site in the Middle Atlas Mountains of Morocco, as a case study of human-macaque interactions.


Primates | 2016

Behavioral responses to injury and death in wild Barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus)

Liz A. D. Campbell; Patrick J. Tkaczynski; Mohamed Mouna; Mohamed Qarro; James Waterman; Bonaventura Majolo

The wounding or death of a conspecific has been shown to elicit varied behavioral responses throughout thanatology. Recently, a number of reports have presented contentious evidence of epimeletic behavior towards the dying and dead among non-human animals, a behavioral trait previously considered uniquely human. Here, we report on the behavioral responses of Barbary macaques, a social, non-human primate, to the deaths of four group members (one high-ranking adult female, one high-ranking adult male, one juvenile male, and one female infant), all caused by road traffic accidents. Responses appeared to vary based on the nature of the death (protracted or instant) and the age class of the deceased. Responses included several behaviors with potential adaptive explanations or consequences. These included exploration, caretaking (guarding, carrying, and grooming), and proximity to wounded individuals or corpses, and immediate as well as longer-lasting distress behaviors from other group members following death, all of which have been reported in other non-human primate species. These observations add to a growing body of comparative evolutionary analysis of primate thanatology and help to highlight the multifaceted impacts of human-induced fatalities on an endangered and socially complex primate.


Biological Conservation | 2011

Impacts of tourism on anxiety and physiological stress levels in wild male Barbary macaques.

Laëtitia Maréchal; Stuart Semple; Bonaventura Majolo; Mohamed Qarro; Michael Heistermann; Ann MacLarnon


Forest Ecology and Management | 2013

Structure and spatio-temporal dynamics of cedar forests along a management gradient in the Middle Atlas, Morocco

Rafael M. Navarro-Cerrillo; Rubén D. Manzanedo; Julia Bohorque; Raúl Sánchez; Javier Sánchez; Sergio de Miguel; David Solano; Mohamed Qarro; Daniel M. Griffith; Guillermo Palacios


Animal Conservation | 2014

How tourism and pastoralism influence population demographic changes in a threatened large mammal species

Nelly Ménard; A. Foulquier; Dominique Vallet; Mohamed Qarro; P. Le Gouar; Jean-Sébastien Pierre


Revue d'écologie | 1999

Bark stripping and water availability: A comparative study between Moroccan and Algerian barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus)

Nelly Ménard; Mohamed Qarro

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Stuart Semple

University of Roehampton

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Dominique Vallet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ann MacLarnon

University of Roehampton

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