User:Di Whitt/Black capuchin

Diet
Black capuchin monkeys are omnivorous. They eat a wide variety of foods, including insects, bird eggs, small vertebrates, leaves, bulbs, seeds and fruits. Their choice among these depends primarily on seasonal availability. While they are considered generalist feeders, fruit can make up as much as three or four fifths of their diet. They are apt to experiment with new sources, which results in them consuming a diverse diet. One group of black capuchins, for example, ate 61 of 145 fruits available to them in their environment. When they exist in small patches of forest which lack adequate amounts of fruit to feed the whole group, black capuchins have been known to exploit nearby agricultural operations by stripping the bark from trees to eat the pine sap and phloem underneath.

Group Dynamics
The black capuchin is a social animal. It lives in hierarchical groups, usually consisting of 6 to 20 members, although membership can reach as high as 30. Despite the fact that these groups tend to be made up of more females than males, the alpha female of the group is submissive to the alpha male. The size of the group operates as a function of food availability; size and cohesiveness are highest when food is readily available. When food is scarce, black capuchins split up into smaller groups to cover more ground on a per capita basis. This is observed both seasonally in the short term and over the course of years in the long term. The larger the group, the more food they need, which in turn leads to more travel.

Females are, for the most part, philopatric. Although the rare female can be observed leaving her natal group, dispersal is largely a male phenomenon. When females do leave, they do so gradually, retreating first to the group’s periphery before breaking away entirely.

Communication within groups consists of bodily, facial and vocal communications. One example of this is the 'scream embrace mechanism’, a high pitched called used to regroup (usually male) members of a group. Another is the employment of calls to warn fellow group members of nearby predators.

Aggression
Males are apt to kill the offspring of competing males, especially during power struggles. When females are aggressive, it is generally in food squabbles, but even these conflicts are generally relegated to the male portion of the population, with one study finding that females participated in only 19% of such fights. When they do so, however, they are almost always the aggressor (93% of the time in the same study), their favourite target being juveniles. Such conflict perhaps arises due to the tendency of dominant females to take control of patchy areas of food.

Bonding
Grooming plays a central role in bonding between black capuchins. It serves the obvious purpose of hygiene as evidenced by how the monkeys focus their efforts on the areas of their partner which their partner cannot groom themselves. These same areas are also disproportionately targeted by parasites. Grooming, however, also serves several social functions, all associated with bonding. For example, it allows for low-rank black capuchins to bond with the dominant members of the group and for members at odds with each other to reconcile and relieve tension.

The purpose of such bonding is often for lower ranked monkeys to procure easier food access from dominant bond-partners. Females, for example, might compete to groom the dominant female in those cases where a hierarchy exists, which is not assured among female black capuchins. Still, same sex grooming is rare, however, with little to no evidence of male-male grooming and female-female grooming accounting for a minority of cases. Female-female grooming only occurs when the group is highly cohesive. When it does occur, they favour kin. Females more commonly bond with males, particularly the alpha. The hierarchy has other effects on grooming as well. For one, face to face grooming is more frequent when the groomer is dominant and well-bonded with partner being groomed. The frequency increases even more based on rank-difference; the less equal the monkeys’ footing in the above described situation, the more likely face to face grooming is.

Mating
Females strongly favour the alpha male in choosing a sexual partner; one study found that he is the target mate in three quarters of female sexual advances and failed to find any coercion on his part which might force this outcome.

To initiate mating, females possess a wide variety of signals, both auditory and ocular, which they employ at different stages of the process. There is some evidence that these are used to encourage coitus to occur at the time most opportune for procreation, including the increasing frequency at which visual signals occur as ovulation approaches. At least seven distinct calls exist for this purpose alone, although no evidence has been found that call type indicates anything to do with the stage of ovulation or fertility, although they do change pre and post copulation. Those vocalized after mating may function to assure the chosen mate of his paternity by making the whole affair public knowledge and thereby encourage him to guard both the female and her resulting offspring from competing mates and infanticide. In this context, the purpose of male postcoital courtship is perhaps revealed to be mate protection. For the same ends, the potentially impregnated female might uses visual signals to assure the alpha of his status as her mate while using vocalizations to confuse the other males as to who the father truly is and thereby discourage aggression.