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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Photo via University of Michigan (U-M).
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Published on
Friday, March 7, 2025
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff and wire services
The immune
performance of wild capuchin monkeys
declines when the animals experience
higher temperatures, and younger monkeys
seem to be particularly
vulnerable to heat, according to a University of
Michigan (U-M) study of wild
white-faced capuchins in Costa Rica. U-M anthropology
doctoral student Jordan Lucore examined
how the immune systems of wild monkeys
in the Taboga Forest
Reserve, a protected area
in Cańas Canton, Guanacaste Province,
were impacted by temperature. Lucore and a team
of researchers found that when monkeys
experienced about two weeks of warmer
temperatures, 86 degrees Fahrenheit, their
generalized immune system performance
declined. This is the part of the
immune system that is activated as
soon as the body senses a threat. “We think this has
implications for understanding the
effects of climate change because we’re seeing this
unlikely relationship between the immune
system and temperature in this
particular study species, and we’re seeing it at much
lower temperatures than expected,” Lucore said. “Eighty-six degrees
Fahrenheit is not that hot.” Their findings
were a surprise, Lucore said. Scientists expect endotherm
animals, that
can regulate their own body temperature,
like mammals, to be able to protect
themselves against fluctuating
temperatures because they can maintain a
constant body temperature. Launched in 2017,
the Capuchinos de Taboga Research
Project focuses on the cognition,
endocrinology and behavior of these primates. The project is
co-directed by Jacinta Beehner, U-M
professor of anthropology and
psychology; Thore Bergman, U-M professor
of psychology; and Marcela Benítez,
professor of anthropology at Emory
University, all of whom are co-authors of the
study. “Capuchins are
thought of as generalist species because
they live in a lot of different places
with different climates and diverse
ecologies. They’re successful
generalists,” Lucore said. “That was another
concerning thing about the results: I can’t believe we’re seeing this in
capuchins. They are quite
resilient.” Studying the
immune system can be invasive:
Biomarkers are typically found in blood
serum, which can only be extracted in invasive ways. But Lucore examined a
biomarker called neopterin, which can be measured in urine.
The
researchers used a “clean
catch” method
to collect the urine. Urine
that falls on the ground or other leaves
often can’t be
used because it may be contaminated,
Lucore said.
Taking
care to
not
stress the animals or get too close, the
researchers followed the monkeys, which
are habituated to human presence, until
they urinated.
The
researchers then caught the urine using a
basket wrapped in plastic attached to a
stick.
Field
researchers at the site can individually
identify each monkey to keep track of
which urine samples belong to particular
individuals.
Lucore
measured the amount of neopterin in the
urine and modeled the temperature in the
days and weeks leading
up to the
urine collection.
The
researchers found that immune performance
declined when the monkeys experienced two
weeks of high temperatures.
They
also saw that younger monkeys experienced
the strongest
impact on immune performance.
“We
discovered that young individuals’
immune systems may be particularly
affected by temperature compared to the
rest of the age groups,” Lucore
said. “This
is especially important for potential
health and fitness outcomes because when
you’re
young, you
rely on your generalized immune system.
Your
adaptive immune system has not yet
developed.”
The
adaptive immune system is the component of
the immune system that recognizes specific
pathogens, something that takes time, up
to several years, for young animals to
develop.
Lucore
said the researchers don’t
know yet whether this has long-term
impacts on health in wild animals.
Longer-term
studies will
need to
look at multiple generations to conclude
whether the monkeys’
decreased immune performance results in
poorer health or reproductive outcomes. Lucore
also said the results may be difficult to
apply to humans, but they can tell us something
about how climate change is
impacting
wild animal populations.
“Climate
change is happening. It’s
going to have effects on
anyone living on Earth in ways that you
may not expect, and
especially on these fundamental systems
that we need to survive,” Lucore
said. “The
fact that a graduate student like me can
go out there and collect rather short-term
data and find strong evidence that
temperatures are affecting the physiology
of wild animals—I think that’s a
pretty important thing to keep in mind.”
The
Capuchinos de Taboga field team,
specifically co-authors Amy White, Lorena
Sinclair, Vasco Alexandre Martins, Sarah
Kovalaskas and Juan Carlos Ordońez, were
instrumental in the study. Co-author
Andrew Marshall, U-M professor of
anthropology and of
ecology and evolutionary biology, provided
critical analysis and interpretation of
the study.
---------------- How can the study of threats to wild monkeys help strengthen animal protection laws? We would like to know your thoughts on this story. Send your comments to news@amcostarica.com
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