A 33-year study of white-faced capuchin monkeys in Costa Rica found that extreme climate events like El Niño and La Niña can undermine the benefits of large social groups, altering long-standing ...
A 33-year study of white-faced capuchin monkeys in Costa Rica has found that climate extremes like El Niño and La Niña can erode the advantages of living in large groups. Normally, bigger groups ...
23hon MSN
When strength in numbers stops working: Climate extremes rewrite monkey society in Costa Rica
As climate change intensifies, scientists are becoming increasingly concerned about how animals will cope with a more unpredictable world. One way to gain insight is by studying how animals have ...
As climate change intensifies, scientists are becoming increasingly concerned about how animals will cope with a more unpredictable world. One way to ...
The relationship between the foraging behavior of a group of wedge-capped capuchin monkeys Cebus olivaceus and the abundance and spatial distribution of resources, was examined in a highly seasonal ...
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