Publications by authors named "Brogan M Stewart"

Congenital malformations, conditions, injuries, and illness can lead to long-term physical impairment and disability in nonhuman primates. How individual primates change their behaviors flexibly to compensate for their disabilities can inform our understanding of their resilience and ability to adjust to environmental change. Here, we synthesize the literature on nonhuman primates and disability, addressing the questions: how does disability influence behavior in primates? What insights can we take from the literature to better understand and predict the capacity of primates to modify their behaviors in the face of human-induced environmental change? We conducted a systematic review of the literature on spontaneous physical impairment and disability in captive, free-ranging, and wild primates.

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Animals must make route choices every day when moving through their habitat while foraging. Choosing an optimal route can be cognitively costly, and primates and other animals have been shown to use simple heuristics, "rules of thumb", to make foraging route choices. We investigated the potential use of heuristics among foraging free-ranging Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata) during solitary foraging trials.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A study on free-ranging Japanese macaques found that mothers caring for disabled infants had higher fGC levels, suggesting increased stress, while physical impairments in adult females did not significantly affect their fGC levels.
  • * Social factors, particularly dominance rank, played a significant role, with higher-ranking females exhibiting lower fGC levels, indicating that social status may mitigate stress in this population of macaques.
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