INVESTIGADORES
DI BITETTI Mario Santiago
artículos
Título:
Food-associated calls and audience effects in tufted capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella).
Autor/es:
DI BITETTI, M. S.
Revista:
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Editorial:
Elsevier
Referencias:
Lugar: Oxford; Año: 2005 vol. 69 p. 911 - 919
ISSN:
0003-3472
Resumen:
Several species of birds and primates produce food-associated vocalizations upon finding or consuming food. Tufted capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) produce two food-associated vocalizations (the grgr and the food-associated whistle series), which are functionally referential. By experimentally placing new food sources (feeding platforms containing half pieces of banana), I explored the factors that affect the production of food-associated calls in a wild group of tufted capuchins. Finders of these platforms called in 81% of the discoveries when the platform contained fruit (N = 57) but in 0% of cases when the platform was empty (N = 5). Males and females of all ages and dominance ranks gave food-associated calls when discovering a platform with fruit. The probability that a finder gave food-associated vocalizations was lower during the period of food scarcity and when the platform contained a small amount of bananas (three pieces as opposed to ³20 pieces). There was an effect of the audience on the latency to give food-associated calls. The time elapsed until the finder gave the first food-associated call decreased with the presence and density of nearby individuals and increased with the distance from other individuals to the platform. The latency to call was longer for females than for males. The audience effect and the effect of the sex of the finder are consistent with the hypothesis that capuchins use these vocalizations deceptively by withholding information about the presence of a food source. By increasing the latency to call, finders of new food sources can obtain a larger amount of food and thus reduce the costs associated with calling.