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Differential impact of severe drought on infant mortality in two sympatric neotropical primates

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dc.contributor.author Campos, Fernando A.
dc.contributor.author Kalbitzer, Urs
dc.contributor.author Melin, Amanda D.
dc.contributor.author Hogan, Jeremy D.
dc.contributor.author Cheves, Saul E.
dc.contributor.author Murillo-Chacon, Evin
dc.contributor.author Guadamuz, Adrián
dc.contributor.author Myers, Monica S.
dc.contributor.author Schaffner, Colleen M.
dc.contributor.author Jack, Katharine M.
dc.contributor.author Aureli, Filippo
dc.contributor.author Fedigan, Linda M.
dc.date.accessioned 2026-06-01T21:03:36Z
dc.date.available 2026-06-01T21:03:36Z
dc.date.issued 2020-04
dc.identifier.citation Campos, F. A. et al. (2020). Differential impact of severe drought on infant mortality in two sympatric neotropical primates. Royal Society Open Science. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.200302
dc.identifier.issn 2054-5703
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.200302
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11606/2253
dc.description.abstract Extreme climate events can have important consequences for the dynamics of natural populations, and severe droughts are predicted to become more common and intense due to climate change. We analysed infant mortality in relation to drought in two primate species (white-faced capuchins, Cebus capucinus imitator, and Geoffroy's spider monkeys, Ateles geoffroyi ) in a tropical dry forest in northwestern Costa Rica. Our survival analyses combine several rare and valuable long-term datasets, including long-term primate life-history, landscape-scale fruit abundance, food-tree mortality, and climate conditions. Infant capuchins showed a threshold mortality response to drought, with exceptionally high mortality during a period of intense drought, but not during periods of moderate water shortage. By contrast, spider monkey females stopped reproducing during severe drought, and the mortality of infant spider monkeys peaked later during a period of low fruit abundance and high food-tree mortality linked to the drought. These divergent patterns implicate differing physiology, behaviour or associated factors in shaping species-specific drought responses. Our findings link predictions about the Earth's changing climate to environmental influences on primate mortality risk and thereby improve our understanding of how the increasing severity and frequency of droughts will affect the dynamics and conservation of wild primates.
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher The Royal Society
dc.relation.ispartof Royal Society Open Science
dc.title Differential impact of severe drought on infant mortality in two sympatric neotropical primates
dc.type Article


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