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Krisztina N. Mosdossy

Researcher at University of Calgary

Publications -  4
Citations -  207

Krisztina N. Mosdossy is an academic researcher from University of Calgary. The author has contributed to research in topics: Foraging & Cebus capucinus. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 178 citations.

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Seasonality, extractive foraging and the evolution of primate sensorimotor intelligence.

TL;DR: Foraging observations on four groups of wild capuchins (Cebus capucinus) inhabiting a seasonally dry tropical forest found that the exploitation of embedded or mechanically protected invertebrates was concentrated during periods of fruit scarcity, which suggests that embedded insects are best characterized as a fallback food for capuchina.
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Drivers of home range characteristics across spatiotemporal scales in a Neotropical primate, Cebus capucinus

TL;DR: This paper used a multiscale mixed effects modeling framework to examine how seasonal fluctuations in climate, food resource abundance and group mass affect variance in home range area and the maturity stage of forest used by a group-living Neotropical primate, Cebus capucinus.
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Quantifying seasonal fallback on invertebrates, pith, and bromeliad leaves by white-faced capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) in a tropical dry forest.

TL;DR: Capuchins are convergent with hominins in possessing large brains and high levels of sensorimotor intelligence, thus their research has broad implications for primate evolution, including factors shaping cognitive innovations, brain size, and the role of entomophagy in the human diet.
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Seasonal importance of flowers to Costa Rican capuchins (Cebus capucinus imitator): Implications for plant and primate.

TL;DR: How capuchins affect the reproductive success of flower food species by quantifying the potential pollination rate is explored, and the value of assessing the importance of rare foods in the primate diet is illustrated.