Cristiane Cäsar

Cristiane Cäsar
  • PhD
  • Researcher at Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais

About

35
Publications
11,630
Reads
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962
Citations
Current institution
Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais
Current position
  • Researcher
Additional affiliations
June 2016 - present
Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais
Position
  • Biologist/Researcher
February 2004 - September 2007
Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais
Position
  • Supervisor
Description
  • Supervisor of undergraduate projects in Biological Sciences at PUC Minas
May 2002 - September 2007
Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais
Position
  • Biologist/Researcher

Publications

Publications (35)
Article
Full-text available
Social species live in groups that vary in size and composition for many reasons, including resource availability, predation risk, and space restrictions. Their social interactions reflect intraspecific interactions, social bonding, rank, reproductive status, and relatedness. Titi monkeys (Callicebus, Cheracebus, and Plecturocebus) are a diverse gr...
Article
Full-text available
Predator presentation experiments are widely used to investigate animal alarm vocalizations. They usually involve presentations of predator models or playbacks of predator calls, but it remains unclear whether the two paradigms provide similar results, a major limitation when investigating animal syntactic and semantic capacities. Here, we investig...
Article
The emergent field of animal linguistics applies linguistics tools to animal data in order to investigate potential linguistic-like properties of their communication. One of these tools is the “Urgency Principle”, a pragmatic principle stating that in an alarm sequence, calls providing information about the nature or location of a threat must come...
Article
Platyrrhini are highly vulnerable to the yellow fever (YF) virus. From 2016 to 2018, the Atlantic Forest of southeast Brazil faced its worst sylvatic YF outbreak in about a century, thought to have killed thousands of primates. It is essential to assess the impact of this epidemic on threatened primate assemblages to design effective conservation s...
Article
Full-text available
For arboreal primates, ground use may increase dispersal opportunities, tolerance to habitat change, access to ground-based resources, and resilience to human disturbances, and so has conservation implications. We collated published and unpublished data from 86 studies across 65 localities to assess titi monkey (Callicebinae) terrestriality. We exa...
Article
Full-text available
Previous work suggested that titi monkeys Callicebus nigrifrons combine two alarm calls, the A- and B-calls, to communicate about predator type and location. To explore how listeners process these sequences, we recorded alarm call sequences of six free-ranging groups exposed to terrestrial and aerial predator models, placed on the ground or in the...
Presentation
Although call sequences have the potential to convey more information than single call utterances, they constitute an under-researched area in the field of animal communication. Black-fronted titi monkeys Callicebus nigrifrons emit A-calls to aerial predators and B-calls to terrestrial predators, and previous work has suggested that the two calls c...
Article
Full-text available
Many primates produce one type of alarm call to a broad range of events, usually terrestrial predators and non-predatory situations, which raises questions about whether primate alarm calls should be considered ‘functionally referential’. A recent example is black-fronted titi monkeys, Callicebus nigrifrons, which emit sequences of B-calls to terre...
Article
The variation in ecological traits in pitheciids allow investigation of vocal communication across a range of social and acoustic circumstances. In this review, we present a summary of the history of pitheciid vocal studies, and review i) the status of current knowledge of pitheciid vocal repertoire sizes, ii) how much we understand about the conte...
Presentation
Titi monkeys (Callicebus nigrifrons) produce two acoustically simple alarm calls, the A and B-calls. A-calls functionally refer to threats within or above the canopy, such as raptors and capuchin monkeys. B-calls are given in a broader context, which includes terrestrial predators, when the caller is moving near the forest ground or when disturbed...
Poster
Full-text available
During vocal signalling, animals often combine distinct acoustic units into sequences. Studies on the information encoded in such sequences mostly focuses on the unit level, while research on the information conveyed by sequence composition and structure is still in its beginnings. Indeed, the holistic analysis of sequence composition, temporal str...
Presentation
Previous work has shown that titi monkeys, Callicebus nigrifrons, emit different sequences of A- and B-calls to various predation events, and data have been consistent with the interpretation that these sequences can convey information about both the predator’s type and its location. In the current study, we tried to replicate these findings by pre...
Poster
Full-text available
Primate alarm calls to aerial predators are typically very predator-specific, while alarm calls to terrestrial predators are often also given in non-predatory contexts. However, various studies have demonstrated that some primate call types can be discriminated as context-specific acoustic variants. In titi monkeys, A-calls are emitted to both rapt...
Article
Full-text available
Cäsar et al. (2013) show that the structure of Titi monkey call sequences can, with just two call types (A and B), reflect information about predator type and predator location. Using the general methods of Schlenker et al. (2014, 2016, to appear), we ask what these observations show about the ‘linguistic’ structure of Titi calls. We first demonstr...
Article
Full-text available
We argue that rich data gathered in experimental primatology in the last 40 years can benefit from analytical methods used in contemporary linguistics. Focusing on the syntactic and especially semantic side, we suggest that these methods could help clarify five questions: (i) what morphology and syntax, if any, do monkey calls have? (ii) what is th...
Article
Full-text available
We explain why general techniques from formal linguistics can and should be applied to the analysis of monkey communication – in the areas of syntax and especially semantics. An informed look at our recent proposals shows that such techniques needn’t rely excessively on categories of human language: syntax and semantics provide versatile formal too...
Article
Full-text available
This paper reports on an automated and openly available tool for automatic acoustic analysis and transcription of primate calls, which takes raw field recordings and outputs call labels time-aligned with the audio. The system's output predicts a majority of the start times of calls accurately within 200 milliseconds. The tools do not require any ma...
Article
Full-text available
Animal acoustic communication often takes the form of complex sequences, made up of multiple distinct acoustic units. Apart from the well-known example of birdsong, other animals such as insects, amphibians, and mammals (including bats, rodents, primates, and cetaceans) also generate complex acoustic sequences. Occasionally, such as with birdsong,...
Article
Full-text available
We observed a putative case of empathy among wild black-fronted titi monkeys (Callicebus nigrifrons) from two different groups (D and R). In over 10 years of behavioural observations of five habituated groups of this species, only low levels of inter-group tolerance have been observed. However, on one day, we encountered the adult male from group D...
Article
Full-text available
The likelihood of interspecific interactions between wild primates is particularly high for species with overlapping territories. The sharing of the same or similar ecological niches can result in competition for space or resources, which can lead to agonistic encounters such as predator-prey interactions. Here, we report the observation of an abdu...
Article
Full-text available
Animal alarm calls can encode information about a predator's category, size, distance or threat level. In non-human primates, alarm calls typically refer to broad classes of disturbances, in some instances to specific predators. Here, we present the results of a field experiment with a New World primate, the black-fronted titi monkey (Callicebus ni...
Article
Full-text available
Animal alarm calls can encode information about a predator's category, size, distance or threat level. In non-human primates, alarm calls typically refer to broad classes of disturbances, in some instances to specific predators. Here, we present the results of a field experiment with a New World primate, the black-fronted titi monkey (Callicebus ni...
Article
There is relatively good evidence that non-human primates can communicate about objects and events in their environment in ways that allow recipients to draw inferences about the nature of the event experienced by the signaller. In some species, there is also evidence that the basic semantic units are not individual calls, but call sequences and th...
Article
Black-fronted titi monkeys, Callicebus nigrifrons, produce acoustically distinct vocalizations in response to several predator species. Compared to other primates, the calls are remarkably quiet, high-pitched and structurally simple, suggesting that they may not function uniquely as predator-specific warning calls. To address this, we investigated...
Article
Full-text available
Upon encountering predators, many animals produce specific vocalisations that alert others and sometimes dissuade the predators from hunting. Callicebus monkeys are known for their large vocal repertoire, but little is known about the function and meaning of most call types. We recorded a large number of natural predator responses from five differe...
Article
Full-text available
A maternal infanticide was observed in a group of unprovisioned wild black-fronted titi monkeys (Callicebus nigrifrons). An approximately 3-day-old male infant was killed by his mother. A post-mortem revealed the infant to be clinically healthy. We considered various hypotheses to explain why this behavior occurred (e.g., reproductive advantage, st...
Article
Full-text available
We observed a case of infant adoption in an unprovisioned group of wild black-fronted titi monkeys (Callicebus nigrifrons). During our long-term field study we noticed that an infant had moved from one of our study groups (“Desbotado”) to another (“Rio”). Observations of the adoptive group confirm that it was being cared for by the adult male, and...

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