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Navigating with White-Faced Capuchin Monkeys : Primate Behavioral Ecology and Spatial Cognition in a Mesoamerican Rainforest.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Urbani, Bernardo.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Capuchin monkeys--Behavior--Costa Rica.
Capuchin monkeys.
Spatial behavior in animals.
Capuchin monkeys--Behavior.
Costa Rica.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (174 pages)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Leiden : Sidestone Press, 2023.
Summary:
This monograph examines a set of questions concerning human and nonhuman primate cognition, spatial memory, foraging behavior, and the ability of monkeys to form mental maps of the location and distribution of feeding and resting sites. Two primary forms of spatial memory have been hypothesized for primates. First, it has been suggested that primates might represent spatial memory in the form of a coordinate-based (geometric) map in which points in the landscape are stored as true coordinates and individuals calculate precise angles and distances between targets. Alternatively, it has been suggested that primates may internally represent spatial information as a route-based (topological) map in which individuals use and reuse a set of common pathways and a select number of landmarks to reach a large number of targets. This research examines questions of behavior and cognition in wild white-faced capuchins (_Cebus imitator_) in northeastern Costa Rica. First, a natural field study or behavioral-ecological study was carried out in which the diet, foraging behavior, activity budget, natural decision-making, and movement patterns of wild capuchins were documented. Secondly, an experimental field study was performed by placing feeding platforms in the forest to determine how capuchins integrate the spatial location of these new feeding sites into an internal representation and the degree to which travel routes are most consistent with a coordinate-based or a route-based spatial representation. A major goal of this research is to develop an understanding of the challenges primates naturally face in locating resources that vary in time and space, and to identify the set of features that may have played a fundamental role in shaping the evolution of decision-making and spatial abilities in humans. In conclusion, the results suggest that capuchins use a
route-based spatial representation in large-scale space and provide some evidence of a coordinate-based spatial representation in small-scale space.
Contents:
Intro
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Capuchin Monkeys
Objectives, Questions, and Hypotheses of this Research
Overview of the Monograph
Navigating the Literature: A Theoretical Assessment and a Review on Spatial Mapping in Primates
Examining Spatial Representations in Capuchins
Exploring Spatial Memory in Wild Primates
Types of Mental Maps
Study Site, Study Group, Materials, and Methods
Study Site
Data Collection
Research Design: Natural Field Study (Behavioral-Ecological Phase)
Research Design: Experimental Field Study (Field Experimental Phase)
Data analysis
Pilot study
Ethical statement
Data availability
Study Group
The Behavioral Ecology of a Group of Wild White-Faced Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus imitator)
Discussion
Activity budget
Diet, feeding and foraging behavior
Ranging patterns
Results
Resting sites
Materials and Methods
Spatial Mapping in Wild White-Faced Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus imitator): A Natural Field Study
Pattern of feeding/resting tree visits and distribution
Canopy density and forest profile: Field-of-view in the forest canopy
A test of spatial memory: The case of the use of two feeding tree species
Evaluating travel itineraries
Use of nodes and route segments
Reaching the major feeding/resting trees from different directions
Spatial Mapping in Wild White-Faced Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus Imitator): An Experimental Field Study
Material and Methods
Do white-faced capuchins exhibit a win-shift foraging rule when selecting experimental feeding platforms?.
Do white-faced capuchins select nearer platforms over more distant platforms? Do white-faced capuchins travel to more distant feeding platforms that contain higher food rewards preferentially over nearer feeding platforms that contain lower food rewards?
Do white-faced capuchins use traditional routes of travel to reach experimental feeding platforms or do they select novel travel routes?
Do white-faced capuchins travel between sequential feeding platforms using a distance-minimizing principle, and over the course of the field experiment do they reduce their circuity index in traveling between experimental platforms?
Do white-faced capuchins visit experimental feeding platforms in the same order as they were first encountered?
Do white-faced capuchins exhibit a win-shift foraging rule when selecting experimental feeding platforms?
Experiment 2
Do white-faced capuchins select nearer platforms over more distant platforms?
Experiment 1
Conclusions
References
Appendix: The Study Area at La Suerte Biological Field Station (EBLS)
Blank Page
Blank Page.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Other Format:
Print version: Urbani, Bernardo Navigating with White-Faced Capuchin Monkeys
ISBN:
94-6428-059-X

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