Kerry Ossi

Kerry Ossi
Stony Brook University | Stony Brook · Department of Anthropology

PhD

About

14
Publications
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368
Citations
Introduction
I'm a Ph.D. student finishing up my dissertation on feeding strategies in juvenile Phayre's leaf monkeys.

Publications

Publications (14)
Article
Full-text available
Objectives Raising offspring imposes energetic costs, especially for female mammals. Consequently, seasons favoring high energy intake and sustained positive energy balance often result in a conception peak. Factors that may weaken this coordinated effect include premature offspring loss and adolescent subfertility. Furthermore, seasonal ingestion...
Article
Studies of primate feeding ontogeny provide equivocal support for reduced juvenile proficiency. When immatures exhibit decreased feeding competency, these differences are attributed to a spectrum of experience- and strength-related constraints and are often linked to qualitative assessments of food difficulty. However, few have investigated age-rel...
Article
Full-text available
The marbled cat (Pardofelis marmorata) is arguably one of the least known Southeast Asian felids. Based mainly on indirect evidence, a nocturnal and predominantly arboreal lifestyle has been assumed while little is known about its diet. Here we report how a marbled cat injured a juvenile male Phayre's leaf monkey (Trachypithecus phayrei crepusculus...
Article
In primates and other mammals, weaning is an equivocal concept, as is reflected in the numerous ways it is measured: a) first intake of solid food, b) conflict over access to the nipple, c) ability to survive without mother, d) maternal resumption of cycling, or e) the cessation of nipple contact. The lack of a consistent definition means that wean...
Article
Primate life histories are strongly influenced by both body and brain mass and are mediated by food availability and perhaps dietary adaptations. It has been suggested that folivorous primates mature and reproduce more slowly than frugivores due to lower basal metabolic rates as well as to greater degrees of arboreality, which can lower mortality a...
Article
Full-text available
Feeding competition is suggested as a major factor constraining group size in social foragers. It has, however, been challenging to demonstrate consequences of reduced energy gain in terms of fitness, possibly because social foragers may compensate negative effects of scramble competition via adjustments in time budgets. Herbivorous animals are par...
Article
The extent of diversity within closely related taxa may be a function of their shared evolutionary history or of selective forces causing adaptive changes. Examining variation among taxa within a single genus may help to identify flexibility in trait variation because recently diverged populations are more likely living in the environment of adapta...

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