• Neanderthals diving under the water CONFIRMED!

    From I Envy JTEM@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 5 17:25:14 2022
    : Neanderthals on the beach: use of marine resources at
    : grotta dei moscerini

    So every once in a while, when bored of porn, I do the
    Google on this "Human Origins" stuff and I found...

    Actually, no. I didn't find this:

    : At Moscerini 23.9% of the specimens were gathered directly
    : from the sea floor as live animals by skin diving Neandertals.

    : Archaeological data from sites in Italy, France and Spain
    : confirm that shell fishing and fresh water fishing was a
    : common activity of Neandertals

    https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0226690

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31940356/

    Instead I found a Youtube video, but that Youtube
    video did reference the above.




    -- --

    https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/677828482371403776

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_l@21:1/5 to I Envy JTEM on Sat Mar 5 18:46:05 2022
    On Saturday, March 5, 2022 at 8:25:15 PM UTC-5, I Envy JTEM wrote:
    : Neanderthals on the beach: use of marine resources at
    : grotta dei moscerini

    So every once in a while, when bored of porn, I do the
    Google on this "Human Origins" stuff and I found...

    Actually, no. I didn't find this:

    : At Moscerini 23.9% of the specimens were gathered directly
    : from the sea floor as live animals by skin diving Neandertals.

    : Archaeological data from sites in Italy, France and Spain
    : confirm that shell fishing and fresh water fishing was a
    : common activity of Neandertals

    https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0226690

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31940356/

    Instead I found a Youtube video, but that Youtube
    video did reference the above.




    -- --

    https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/677828482371403776

    Bonobos forage for shrimp and high-iodine swamp plants.
    Common chimps use sticks to gather seaweed.
    Gorillas finger-rake floating hydrocharis/frogbit for high-protein snacks. Neanderthals foraged for shellfish & freshwater fish in the shallows & tide pools.
    So what? They were omnivores. Pigs do the same in SEAsia.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From I Envy JTEM@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 5 19:02:30 2022
    DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:

    : At Moscerini 23.9% of the specimens were gathered directly
    : from the sea floor as live animals by skin diving Neandertals.

    Hmm. So the subject line specifically mentions diving under water, one
    of the quotes I chose states "diving Neanderthals" and you don't talk
    about diving under the water at all...

    Bonobos forage for shrimp and high-iodine swamp plants.
    Common chimps use sticks to gather seaweed.
    Gorillas finger-rake floating hydrocharis/frogbit for high-protein snacks. Neanderthals foraged for shellfish & freshwater fish in the shallows & tide pools.
    So what? They were omnivores. Pigs do the same in SEAsia.

    Well with a little reading comprehension you'll note the emphasis on diving, on the under water, and with a little reading comprehension you'll recall the all the
    previous mentions of Pachyosteosclerosis in other threads, it's connection to the water, it being touted as evidence for diving under the water...

    Oo! And if you had these things -- readings comprehension & retention -- you'd even put these things together, and maybe even say something on topic for
    a change!

    Imagine that. Because I can't. Seems you're not capable.






    -- --

    https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/677605208844550144

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_l@21:1/5 to I Envy JTEM on Sun Mar 6 17:56:04 2022
    On Saturday, March 5, 2022 at 10:02:31 PM UTC-5, I Envy JTEM wrote:
    DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:

    : At Moscerini 23.9% of the specimens were gathered directly
    : from the sea floor as live animals by skin diving Neandertals.
    Hmm. So the subject line specifically mentions diving under water, one
    of the quotes I chose states "diving Neanderthals" and you don't talk
    about diving under the water at all...
    Bonobos forage for shrimp and high-iodine swamp plants.
    Common chimps use sticks to gather seaweed.
    Gorillas finger-rake floating hydrocharis/frogbit for high-protein snacks. Neanderthals foraged for shellfish & freshwater fish in the shallows & tide pools.
    So what? They were omnivores. Pigs do the same in SEAsia.
    Well with a little reading comprehension you'll note the emphasis on diving, on
    the under water, and with a little reading comprehension you'll recall the all the
    previous mentions of Pachyosteosclerosis in other threads, it's connection to
    the water, it being touted as evidence for diving under the water...

    Oo! And if you had these things -- readings comprehension & retention -- you'd
    even put these things together, and maybe even say something on topic for
    a change!

    Imagine that. Because I can't. Seems you're not capable.






    -- --

    https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/677605208844550144

    The benthic seafloor starts 1mm below the surface at low tide. The same organisms are found in the littoral zone at high tide. Neanderthals could have merely walked in a few inches, wiggled their toes to find clams, used a stick and plucked them, ate
    them and used the shells. They may have skin dived, (no scuba yet), but not necessarily.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From littoral.homo@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Our little mermaid on Mon Mar 7 03:29:26 2022
    Op zondag 6 maart 2022 om 03:46:07 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:

    Our little mermaid wrote:

    Bonobos forage for shrimp and high-iodine swamp plants.
    Common chimps use sticks to gather seaweed.
    Gorillas finger-rake floating hydrocharis/frogbit for high-protein snacks.

    Of, course, my boy, as we predicted 30 yrs ago:
    google
    "ape human evolution mede easy PPT Verhaegen".

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_l@21:1/5 to littor...@gmail.com on Mon Mar 7 04:22:38 2022
    On Monday, March 7, 2022 at 6:29:27 AM UTC-5, littor...@gmail.com wrote:
    Op zondag 6 maart 2022 om 03:46:07 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:
    Our little mermaid wrote:

    Bonobos forage for shrimp and high-iodine swamp plants.
    Common chimps use sticks to gather seaweed.
    Gorillas finger-rake floating hydrocharis/frogbit for high-protein snacks.
    Of, course, my boy, as we predicted 30 yrs ago:
    google
    "ape human evolution mede easy PPT Verhaegen".

    When I reported the high proportion in diet of finger-raking of floating hydrocharis to AAT group, MV kept blathering about high-carb swamp grasses. I had to club him repeatedly before he grasped that finger-raking high-protein hydrocharis was important
    in a vegetarian species. Lowland gorillas live in swamp forests, your "prediction" holds no water.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_l@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 7 06:29:21 2022
    On Monday, March 7, 2022 at 7:22:39 AM UTC-5, DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:
    On Monday, March 7, 2022 at 6:29:27 AM UTC-5, littor...@gmail.com wrote:
    Op zondag 6 maart 2022 om 03:46:07 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:
    Our little mermaid wrote:

    Bonobos forage for shrimp and high-iodine swamp plants.
    Common chimps use sticks to gather seaweed.
    Gorillas finger-rake floating hydrocharis/frogbit for high-protein snacks.
    Of, course, my boy, as we predicted 30 yrs ago:
    google
    "ape human evolution mede easy PPT Verhaegen".
    When I reported the high proportion in diet of finger-raking of floating hydrocharis to AAT group, MV kept blathering about high-carb swamp grasses. I had to club him repeatedly before he grasped that finger-raking high-protein hydrocharis was
    important in a vegetarian species. Lowland gorillas live in swamp forests, your "prediction" holds no water.

    Hydrocharis is a preferred food of gorillas eaten all year, 10% of diet even when tree fruits are ripe; while sedges are a fallback food only eaten when no fruits are ripe, due to fibrousness which gorillas do not prefer. The significance is that Pan &
    Homo instead get their protein from meat, insect larvae, eggs, nuts, etc.

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/38068464_Male_and_female_western_gorilla_diet_Preferred_foods_use_of_fallback_resources_and_implications_for_ape_versus_old_world_monkey_foraging_strategies

    https://groups.google.com/g/sci.anthropology.paleo/c/n4QyVeEoZnQ/m/2Z-St-S7OgQJ


    Hydrocharis chevalieri, Rynchospora corymbosa etc.

    Western lowland gorillas nest in swamps:
    http://scienceblogs.com/zooillogix/2008/08/are_you_hiding_125000_western.php

    Thanks, DD. Does anybody know what plants they're eating there? --Marc

    water lily, water hyacinth, some type of
    African duckweed perhaps... oh, here's the gold:

    http://www.africanconservation.org/dcforum/DCForumID10/41.html

    "Gorillas come to Mbeli Bai to feed on the large-leafed,
    protein-packed, aquatic plant Hydrocharis chevalieri that grows in the
    floating mat of vegetation. Hauling themselves on two legs through
    the thick mud, the gorillas wade waist-deep through small streams and
    rivulets crisscrossing the bai. Some infants clamber onto their
    mothers' shoulders; others, hanging on below their parents' bellies,
    risk a dunking in the sludge. Groups may spend two to four hours
    dredging up handfuls of the plant, vigorously washing off excess mud
    before carefully selecting choice parts to munch from the tangle of
    roots, stems, and leaves. All the while, they sink deeper into the
    mud until **only their chests and heads are visible**".

    [Very good
    selection for air sacs here, and vertical floating, even when seated,
    the head is upright while the hands are above and in the water --DD]

    More here: http://www.google.com/search?q=african+floating+water+plants&ie=utf-8&oe=utf -8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a

    :-) Thanks a lot, DD.
    You're completely right.

    Note "hauling themselves on two legs" cf.bipedal apiths.

    Ggogle "Hydrocharis chevalieri" & you soon find gorillas, eg:
    "The bai is a preferred feeding site for western lowland gorillas, who eat
    the aquatic herbs such as Hydrocharis chevalieri and Rynchospora corymbosa" etc.

    Google "Rhynchospora corymbosa" (Scirpus corymbosus) & you find
    "Dieta del capibara Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris" etc.

    I guess Lucy had very short loops of Henle, like beavers, mopuntain beavers, capibaras, coypus etc.

    But perhaps the savanna people still prefer to explain the glossy appearance
    of her molar enamel by crushing kudu bones, rather than by "vigorously
    washing off excess mud before carefully selecting choice parts to munch from the tangle of roots, stems, and leaves" of frogbit, sedge or cyper plants...

    --Marc Verhaegen

    https://groups.google.com/g/sci.anthropology.paleo/c/0BKS0P0rw5g/m/OU2AMQP4FDgJ


    Ndoki gorillas


    Marc Verhaegen

    Just to clarify an important point: both Pan species eat occasionally meat, eggs, insects, and are therefore omnivorous. But they are NOT carnivorous, as they diet is mainly vegetarian. Tigers are carnivorous, apes not.
    Renato Bender

    Of course, Renato, DD meant they're more carnivorous than gorillas.
    But did they develop hunting colobus monkeys after they split from our ancestors, or before? In any case they hunt monkeys with large canines,
    without tools, on 4 legs & in the trees, the opposite of what the savanna hypothesis supposes.

    --marc

    Chimps don't sit in swamp eating Hydrocharis etc., instead they are
    carnivorous and more dry-adapted, note that females have large estral
    swellings.
     http://books.google.com/books?id=iGfjJ4lKb1IC&pg=PA76&lpg=PA76&dq=gorilla+ndo
    ki+sitting+water&source=bl&ots=6I-aODjID_&sig=ZeQF09bKSzsj0W_nAF_hpSiQeuM&hl=
    en&ei=3HzNSaCrBY6-tAPM09WgAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result
    <http://books.google.com/books?id=iGfjJ4lKb1IC&amp;pg=PA76&amp;lpg=PA76&amp;d
    q=gorilla+ndoki+sitting+water&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=6I-aODjID_&amp;sig=ZeQF09
    bKSzsj0W_nAF_hpSiQeuM&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=3HzNSaCrBY6-tAPM09WgAw&amp;sa=X&amp;oi
    =book_result&amp;resnum=5>

    "This species (Hydrocharis) is found in large patches in deep swamps, and is >> impossible to feed on without sitting in the water, a habit that seems to be >> avoided by these chimpanzees. Thus swamp vegetation, occupying 15-20% of the >> study area, is used almost exclusively by gorillas."

    Swamps of forest bais with few animals (no fish/meat so few crocs?) provide >> sufficient protein to gorillas. Chimps get their protein from dry sources, or
    shallow stream insects.

    Geladas: long tail, no air sac, dry green grass sit-foraging
    Wetland gorillas: no tail, air sac, floating AHV, sit-foraging

     http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1134/is_8_108/ai_56183369



    "Through their efforts, the Nouabale-Ndoki National Park was created there in
    1993, and in this pristine forest sanctuary, we are finally getting an
    opportunity to observe the western lowland gorilla's social life. Within the >> park is a large clearing, probably created by elephants, that has become a >> favorite meeting place and "salad bar" for gorillas, allowing us to observe >> them in the open for the first time.

    Mbeli Bai (bai is a Pygmy word for "swampy clearing," pronounced "buy")
    covers almost twenty-five acres and is rich in aquatic plants of the sedge >> family. The bai may seem an unlikely place to find large congregations of
    gorillas; less than fifteen years ago, zoologists beheved gorillas avoided >> contact with water whenever possible. Yet at Mbeli, we commonly see all but >> the youngest individuals sitting waist- or chest-deep in water as they feed >> on the lush vegetation. Gorillas also use the partially aquatic habitat to >> enhance their displays. On dry land, silverbacks (fully adult males
    characterized by a "saddle" pattern of silver hair) frequently slap the
    ground with their massive hands in an intimidation display that relies mostly
    on the sharp sound for its effect. Near the water's edge at Mbeli, they use a
    similar hand-slap technique to send great plumes of spray toward one another.
    In addition to creating this impressive visual effect, some males have been >> seen leaping into deep water, creating explosive splashes and waves. This
    behavior has its risks, however. We once saw a male jump into water that was >> deeper than he expected and become completely submerged. Apparently chastened
    by his miscalculation, he then had to struggle awkwardly to reach the stream >> bank.

    Gorillas used the swamp at Mondika to feed on both aquatic herbs &
    succulent fruit. Freshwater aquatic plants have been shown to contain higher mineral concentrations (esp.sodium) relative to terrestrial plants in the
    area. It has been suggested that sodium hunger in gorillas is linked to
    feeding on aquatic plants [Kuroda et al.1996; Magliocca & Gautier-Hion,
    2002], as in other taxa, eg, moose [Botkin et al.1973], black & white
    Colobus monkeys [Oates, 1978] & barasingha [Moe 1994].
    At other sites, gorillas visit Œbais¹ regularly, but infrequently (less than twice a month on average [Stokes this issue]). While there, they spend virtually all their time feeding on aquatic herbs [Magliocca et al.2002].
    A novel finding of this study is the important role swamps (particularly
    swamp fruit) may play in gorilla foraging strategy. At Mondika, gorillas
    also fed on a variety of aquatic herbs, most notably Hydrocharis chevalieri, which is rel.high in protein & sodium [Kuroda et al.1996]. However ripe
    fruit, particularly 2 spp of succulent fruit that were not available outside the swamp, appear to account for the much greater frequency of swamp use at
    the site. Swamps were not visited more frequently when ripe fruit or
    preferred herbs were less available in terra firma forest, as would be predicted if gorillas were seeking high-protein herbs or an additional carbohydrate source during periods of resource scarcity. Nor did the swamps appear to be used as a staple source of aquatic herbs, since they were used unevenly throughout the year. By traveling to the swamps, the gorillas
    incurred a substantial travel cost (50 % greater than on non-swamp days). Nutritional data are not currently available to test the benefits of
    swamp use at Mondika, but future investigation will determine whether the particularly high sugar content of fruit, in addition to the higher mineral content of herbs, contributes to the swamp¹s great attraction for gorillas. Swamps are likely to provide a variety of resources that are not available elsewhere , they may contribute to unusu.high gorilla density in these
    areas, as reported for other swamp forests in the region [Fay 1997, Fay & Agnagna 1992].

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From I Envy JTEM@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 7 10:45:59 2022
    DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:

    When I reported the high proportion in diet of finger-raking of floating hydrocharis to AAT group, MV kept blathering about
    high-carb swamp grasses. I had to club him repeatedly before he grasped that finger-raking high-protein hydrocharis was
    important in a vegetarian species. Lowland gorillas live in swamp forests, your "prediction" holds no water.

    Unless evolution was somehow not automatic. Like, if Intelligent Design was false, if some
    intelligence wasn't making choices, guiding every step, then there would be absolutely no
    reason to insist that a certain behavior or environment HAS TO result in a specific evolutionary
    path.. particularly when another species is already there, that niche is filled.

    AND THEN we might also entertain the notion that evolution isn't linear. As difficult a concept
    as it may be to grasp for some (not naming any names), a species like a gorilla isn't a model
    for what our ancestors once were, but the descendants of upright walkers themselves. After
    all, bipedalism, going by the fossil record, is as old as the "Molecular Clock" idiocy places
    gorillas, or at least within the range for their age.

    FINALLY is the fact that we all know and agree that Aquatic Ape is correct. Our ancestors got
    everywhere and everybody is in agreement as to how: Coastal Dispersal. And as we all know
    they weren't carry an African savanna on their back -- or a west African mountain with some
    trout -- coastal dispersal REQUIRES that they were living on & exploiting the coast.

    Aquatic Ape Theory isn't about learning anything new, it's about NOT rejecting what we already
    know and accept just because some academic dickwad ordered you to.




    -- --

    https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/678043055282061312

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_l@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 7 17:52:23 2022
    .On Monday, March 7, 2022 at 9:29:23 AM UTC-5, DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:
    On Monday, March 7, 2022 at 7:22:39 AM UTC-5, DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:
    On Monday, March 7, 2022 at 6:29:27 AM UTC-5, littor...@gmail.com wrote:
    Op zondag 6 maart 2022 om 03:46:07 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:
    Our little mermaid wrote:

    Bonobos forage for shrimp and high-iodine swamp plants.
    Common chimps use sticks to gather seaweed.
    Gorillas finger-rake floating hydrocharis/frogbit for high-protein snacks.
    Of, course, my boy, as we predicted 30 yrs ago:
    google
    "ape human evolution mede easy PPT Verhaegen".
    When I reported the high proportion in diet of finger-raking of floating hydrocharis to AAT group, MV kept blathering about high-carb swamp grasses. I had to club him repeatedly before he grasped that finger-raking high-protein hydrocharis was
    important in a vegetarian species. Lowland gorillas live in swamp forests, your "prediction" holds no water.
    Hydrocharis is a preferred food of gorillas eaten all year, 10% of diet even when tree fruits are ripe; while sedges are a fallback food only eaten when no fruits are ripe, due to fibrousness which gorillas do not prefer. The significance is that Pan &
    Homo instead get their protein from meat, insect larvae, eggs, nuts, etc.

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/38068464_Male_and_female_western_gorilla_diet_Preferred_foods_use_of_fallback_resources_and_implications_for_ape_versus_old_world_monkey_foraging_strategies

    https://groups.google.com/g/sci.anthropology.paleo/c/n4QyVeEoZnQ/m/2Z-St-S7OgQJ


    Hydrocharis chevalieri, Rynchospora corymbosa etc.

    Western lowland gorillas nest in swamps:
    http://scienceblogs.com/zooillogix/2008/08/are_you_hiding_125000_western.php

    Thanks, DD. Does anybody know what plants they're eating there? --Marc

    water lily, water hyacinth, some type of
    African duckweed perhaps... oh, here's the gold:

    http://www.africanconservation.org/dcforum/DCForumID10/41.html

    "Gorillas come to Mbeli Bai to feed on the large-leafed,
    protein-packed, aquatic plant Hydrocharis chevalieri that grows in the floating mat of vegetation. Hauling themselves on two legs through
    the thick mud, the gorillas wade waist-deep through small streams and rivulets crisscrossing the bai. Some infants clamber onto their
    mothers' shoulders; others, hanging on below their parents' bellies,
    risk a dunking in the sludge. Groups may spend two to four hours
    dredging up handfuls of the plant, vigorously washing off excess mud
    before carefully selecting choice parts to munch from the tangle of
    roots, stems, and leaves. All the while, they sink deeper into the
    mud until **only their chests and heads are visible**".

    [Very good
    selection for air sacs here, and vertical floating, even when seated,
    the head is upright while the hands are above and in the water --DD]

    More here: http://www.google.com/search?q=african+floating+water+plants&ie=utf-8&oe=utf -8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a

    :-) Thanks a lot, DD.
    You're completely right.

    Note "hauling themselves on two legs" cf.bipedal apiths.

    Ggogle "Hydrocharis chevalieri" & you soon find gorillas, eg:
    "The bai is a preferred feeding site for western lowland gorillas, who eat the aquatic herbs such as Hydrocharis chevalieri and Rynchospora corymbosa" etc.

    Google "Rhynchospora corymbosa" (Scirpus corymbosus) & you find
    "Dieta del capibara Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris" etc.

    I guess Lucy had very short loops of Henle, like beavers, mopuntain beavers, capibaras, coypus etc.

    But perhaps the savanna people still prefer to explain the glossy appearance of her molar enamel by crushing kudu bones, rather than by "vigorously washing off excess mud before carefully selecting choice parts to munch from the tangle of roots, stems, and leaves" of frogbit, sedge or cyper plants...

    --Marc Verhaegen

    https://groups.google.com/g/sci.anthropology.paleo/c/0BKS0P0rw5g/m/OU2AMQP4FDgJ


    Ndoki gorillas


    Marc Verhaegen

    Just to clarify an important point: both Pan species eat occasionally meat,
    eggs, insects, and are therefore omnivorous. But they are NOT carnivorous, as
    they diet is mainly vegetarian. Tigers are carnivorous, apes not.
    Renato Bender

    Of course, Renato, DD meant they're more carnivorous than gorillas.
    But did they develop hunting colobus monkeys after they split from our ancestors, or before? In any case they hunt monkeys with large canines, without tools, on 4 legs & in the trees, the opposite of what the savanna hypothesis supposes.

    --marc

    Chimps don't sit in swamp eating Hydrocharis etc., instead they are
    carnivorous and more dry-adapted, note that females have large estral
    swellings.

    http://books.google.com/books?id=iGfjJ4lKb1IC&pg=PA76&lpg=PA76&dq=gorilla+ndo
    ki+sitting+water&source=bl&ots=6I-aODjID_&sig=ZeQF09bKSzsj0W_nAF_hpSiQeuM&hl=
    en&ei=3HzNSaCrBY6-tAPM09WgAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result
    <http://books.google.com/books?id=iGfjJ4lKb1IC&amp;pg=PA76&amp;lpg=PA76&amp;d
    q=gorilla+ndoki+sitting+water&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=6I-aODjID_&amp;sig=ZeQF09
    bKSzsj0W_nAF_hpSiQeuM&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=3HzNSaCrBY6-tAPM09WgAw&amp;sa=X&amp;oi
    =book_result&amp;resnum=5>

    "This species (Hydrocharis) is found in large patches in deep swamps, and is
    impossible to feed on without sitting in the water, a habit that seems to be
    avoided by these chimpanzees. Thus swamp vegetation, occupying 15-20% of the
    study area, is used almost exclusively by gorillas."

    Swamps of forest bais with few animals (no fish/meat so few crocs?) provide
    sufficient protein to gorillas. Chimps get their protein from dry sources, or
    shallow stream insects.

    Geladas: long tail, no air sac, dry green grass sit-foraging
    Wetland gorillas: no tail, air sac, floating AHV, sit-foraging

    http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1134/is_8_108/ai_56183369



    "Through their efforts, the Nouabale-Ndoki National Park was created there in
    1993, and in this pristine forest sanctuary, we are finally getting an
    opportunity to observe the western lowland gorilla's social life. Within the
    park is a large clearing, probably created by elephants, that has become a
    favorite meeting place and "salad bar" for gorillas, allowing us to observe
    them in the open for the first time.

    Mbeli Bai (bai is a Pygmy word for "swampy clearing," pronounced "buy") >> covers almost twenty-five acres and is rich in aquatic plants of the sedge
    family. The bai may seem an unlikely place to find large congregations of >> gorillas; less than fifteen years ago, zoologists beheved gorillas avoided
    contact with water whenever possible. Yet at Mbeli, we commonly see all but
    the youngest individuals sitting waist- or chest-deep in water as they feed
    on the lush vegetation. Gorillas also use the partially aquatic habitat to
    enhance their displays. On dry land, silverbacks (fully adult males
    characterized by a "saddle" pattern of silver hair) frequently slap the >> ground with their massive hands in an intimidation display that relies mostly
    on the sharp sound for its effect. Near the water's edge at Mbeli, they use a
    similar hand-slap technique to send great plumes of spray toward one another.
    In addition to creating this impressive visual effect, some males have been
    seen leaping into deep water, creating explosive splashes and waves. This >> behavior has its risks, however. We once saw a male jump into water that was
    deeper than he expected and become completely submerged. Apparently chastened
    by his miscalculation, he then had to struggle awkwardly to reach the stream
    bank.

    Gorillas used the swamp at Mondika to feed on both aquatic herbs &
    succulent fruit. Freshwater aquatic plants have been shown to contain higher mineral concentrations (esp.sodium) relative to terrestrial plants in the area. It has been suggested that sodium hunger in gorillas is linked to feeding on aquatic plants [Kuroda et al.1996; Magliocca & Gautier-Hion, 2002], as in other taxa, eg, moose [Botkin et al.1973], black & white Colobus monkeys [Oates, 1978] & barasingha [Moe 1994].
    At other sites, gorillas visit Œbais¹ regularly, but infrequently (less than
    twice a month on average [Stokes this issue]). While there, they spend virtually all their time feeding on aquatic herbs [Magliocca et al.2002].
    A novel finding of this study is the important role swamps (particularly swamp fruit) may play in gorilla foraging strategy. At Mondika, gorillas also fed on a variety of aquatic herbs, most notably Hydrocharis chevalieri, which is rel.high in protein & sodium [Kuroda et al.1996]. However ripe fruit, particularly 2 spp of succulent fruit that were not available outside the swamp, appear to account for the much greater frequency of swamp use at the site. Swamps were not visited more frequently when ripe fruit or preferred herbs were less available in terra firma forest, as would be predicted if gorillas were seeking high-protein herbs or an additional carbohydrate source during periods of resource scarcity. Nor did the swamps appear to be used as a staple source of aquatic herbs, since they were used unevenly throughout the year. By traveling to the swamps, the gorillas incurred a substantial travel cost (50 % greater than on non-swamp days). Nutritional data are not currently available to test the benefits of
    swamp use at Mondika, but future investigation will determine whether the particularly high sugar content of fruit, in addition to the higher mineral content of herbs, contributes to the swamp¹s great attraction for gorillas. Swamps are likely to provide a variety of resources that are not available elsewhere , they may contribute to unusu.high gorilla density in these areas, as reported for other swamp forests in the region [Fay 1997, Fay & Agnagna 1992].

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)