June 5, 2012
Chimpanzees’ Table Manners Vary By Group

Depending on where a meal is served, a person might tuck in with a fork and knife, with chopsticks or with bare hands. Chimpanzees, it turns out, have a similar kind of cultural variation: Neighboring groups of the animals have unique nut-cracking styles, a new study in the journal Current Biology reports.

Researchers noted that one group of wild chimps in Tai National Park in Ivory Coast preferred stone tools to hammer open coula nuts. Two other groups of chimps used stone tools early in the season, when the nuts were harder, but then switched to wood tools as the nuts grew softer.

The chimp groups also had preferences for different sizes of wood, said Lydia Luncz, the study’s first author and a primatologist at theMax Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropologyin Leipzig, Germany.

The chimpanzees are displaying a sort of cultural preference with their tool choice, said Ms. Luncz, a graduate student. “It’s just a preference they have, because they grew up that way,” she said.

On occasion, when there were not enough stones to be found, the chimpanzees that preferred them would resort to using wood. “They know how to do it,” Ms. Luncz said. “They just don’t like it.”

She also noted that female chimpanzees leave their social groups at puberty to join new groups. By this time they are experts at cracking nuts. But it appears that they adopt the nut-cracking methods used by their new group, Ms. Luncz said.

“Otherwise things would get mixed up, but we see these clear differences between the groups,” she said.

Although the chimpanzee groups neighbor one another and interact often, their interactions are never friendly and they don’t learn from one another. “It’s always war,” Ms. Luncz said. “They don’t interact in a way where they could watch each other nut-cracking.”

From nytimes.com

January 3, 2012
thedailywhat:

I, For One, Etc. of the Day: According to Dr Sue Savage-Rumbaug of the Great Ape Trust in Des Moines, Kanzi, a 31-year-old bonobo in her care, became fascinated with making fire after watching the film Quest for Fire when he was only a year old.
“The movie was released about a year after Kanzi was born and was about early man struggling to control fire,” says Dr.  Savage-Rumbaugh. “Kanzi watched this spellbound over and over hundreds of times.”
The chimp soon began collecting firewood and attempting to ignite it. “His demeanour when he focused on making fire was just like when he watched the movie,” says the doctor, who has clearly not watched enough movies herself to know this couldn’t possibly end well.
In addition to his fire-making skills, Kanzi can also understand some 2,000 words through a system of symbols called lexigrams.
Suffice it to say, if he develops a knack for riding horses I’m outta here.


More images here at The Telegraph. — PrimateWin x

thedailywhat:

I, For One, Etc. of the Day: According to Dr Sue Savage-Rumbaug of the Great Ape Trust in Des Moines, Kanzi, a 31-year-old bonobo in her care, became fascinated with making fire after watching the film Quest for Fire when he was only a year old.

“The movie was released about a year after Kanzi was born and was about early man struggling to control fire,” says Dr.  Savage-Rumbaugh. “Kanzi watched this spellbound over and over hundreds of times.”

The chimp soon began collecting firewood and attempting to ignite it. “His demeanour when he focused on making fire was just like when he watched the movie,” says the doctor, who has clearly not watched enough movies herself to know this couldn’t possibly end well.

In addition to his fire-making skills, Kanzi can also understand some 2,000 words through a system of symbols called lexigrams.

Suffice it to say, if he develops a knack for riding horses I’m outta here.

More images here at The Telegraph. — PrimateWin x

(Source: thedailywhat, via fyeahgreatapes)

November 1, 2011

Orangutans displaying skills and behaviours such as washing socks, sawing pieces of wood, and hammering nails, all learnt through cultural transmission of their own accord. Culture in the making. 

October 23, 2011

Chimpanzee tool use, cultural behaviours, ‘language’, and medicine use. Broadcast in 1995.

October 23, 2011
Culture In Humans And Apes Has The Same Evolutionary Roots

Culture is not a trait that is unique to humans. By studying orangutan populations, a team of researchers headed by anthropologist Michael Krützen from the University of Zurich has demonstrated that great apes also have the ability to learn socially and pass them down through a great many generations. The researchers provide the first evidence that culture in humans and great apes has the same evolutionary roots, thus answering the contentious question as to whether variation in behavioral patterns in orangutans are culturally driven, or caused by genetic factors and environmental influences.

In humans, behavioral innovations are usually passed down culturally from one generation to the next through social learning. For many, the existence of culture in humans is the key adaptation that sets us apart from animals. Whether culture is unique to humans or has deeper evolutionary roots, however, remains one of the unsolved questions in science.

About ten years ago, biologists who had been observing great apes in the wild reported a geographic variation of behavior patterns that could only have come about through the cultural transmission of innovations, much like in humans. The observation triggered an intense debate among scientists that is still ongoing. To this day, it is still disputed whether the geographical variation in behavior is culturally driven or the result of genetic factors and environmental influences.

Anthropologists from the University of Zurich have now studied whether the geographic variation of behavioral patterns in nine orangutan populations in Sumatra and Borneo can be explained by cultural transmission. “This is the case; the cultural interpretation of the behavioral diversity also holds for orangutans – and in exactly the same way as we would expect for human culture,” explains Michael Krützen, the first author of the study just published in Current Biology. The researchers show that genetic factors or environmental influences cannot explain the behavior patterns in orangutan populations. The ability to learn things socially and pass them on evolved over many generations; not just in humans but also apes. “It looks as if the ability to act culturally is dictated by the long life expectancy of apes and the necessity to be able to adapt to changing environmental conditions,” Krützen adds, concluding that, “Now we know that the roots of human culture go much deeper than previously thought. Human culture is built on a solid foundation that is many millions of years old and is shared with the other great apes.”

In their study, the researchers used the largest dataset ever compiled for a great ape species. They analyzed over 100,000 hours of behavioral data, created genetic profiles for over 150 wild orangutans and measured ecological differences between the populations using satellite imagery and advanced remote sensing techniques. “The novelty of our study,” says co-author Carel van Schaik, “is that, thanks to the unprecedented size of our dataset, we were the first to gauge the influence genetics and environmental factors have on the different behavioral patterns among the orangutan populations.” When the authors examined the parameters responsible for differences in social structure and behavioral ecology between orangutan populations, environmental influences and, to a lesser degree, genetic factors played an important role, proving that the parameters measured were the right ones. This, in turn, was pivotal in the main question as to whether genetic factors or environmental influences can explain the behavioral patterns in orangutan populations. “That wasn’t the case. As a result, we could prove that a cultural interpretation for behavioral diversity also holds true for orangutans,” van Schaik concludes.

From eurekalert.org

August 25, 2011

Bonnie the Orangutan has learnt to whistle. 

August 25, 2011
Cultural Transmission : Orangutans wash, cool off, and do ‘housework’

An Orangutan at Tokyo’s Tama Zoo has become an Internet star thanks to a video that shows the tidy primate cleaning itself with a washcloth.

The two-minute clip, shot on an 86 degree day at the zoo, shows the orangutan dipping a washcloth in water, ringing it out and wiping its face and upper body. The primate even mops up spilt water droplets afterward.

A smaller orangutan carefully watches and wants to check out the washcloth, but is gently moved aside.

Most likely, the adult orangutan was taught this behavior — since the washcloth was provided — but it appears to be acting spontaneously, putting his knowledge to good use on a hot day when a cleansing cool-off was refreshing.

Since the little orangutan was watching, the behavior will most likely be passed down. Some years ago, Duke University scientists proved that orangutans have culture, permitting them to learn new things and share that knowledge with others.

Carel van Schaik of Duke and colleagues presented evidence for cultural transmission of 24 behaviors among orangutans. These include:

— using leaves as protective gloves or napkins;
— using sticks to poke into tree holes to obtain insects, to extract seeds from fruit or to scratch body parts;
— using leafy branches to swat insects or gather water;
— “snag-riding,” the orangutan equivalent of a sport in which the animals ride falling dead trees, grabbing vegetation before the tree hits the ground;
— emitting sounds such as “raspberries,” or “kiss-squeaks,” in which leaves or hands are used to amplify the sound;
— building sun covers for nests or, during rain, bunk nests above the nests used for resting.

In the above cases, I believe the orangutans were just using what was available to them in the wild. If such studies include zoo chimps, which have access to human “tools” like washcloths, the list could probably go on and on.

The last common ancestor of humans and orangutans is thought to have lived about 15 million years ago, so the primate drive to learn and share knowledge (even if it’s via unwanted eavesdropping) go way back. We share 96.4 percent of our DNA with orangutans.

Van Schaik said such findings “suggest that the first ancestral man-apes must have had a pretty solid evolutionary cultural foundation on which to build.”

Environment helps in that process. The orangutan exhibit at the Tama Zoo opened on April 28, 2005 and took almost 2 years and around 1 billion yen to build, according to Tokyo Guidebook. The exhibit includes a tall “Sky Walk” where the orangutans can swing across towers between living areas. If orangutans poke sticks into a large ant hill-type structure, they are rewarded with a sticky paste, similar to how they’d be rewarded with ants in the wild. The orangutans even have a vending machine that they operate to get drinks for themselves.

Here you can see the primates cleaning away, doing housekeeping as well as personal cleanup. (I like how this elderly female, “Gypsy,” has to sniff the cloth after most wipes.) She also shows how versatile a straw hat can be, since she first uses it as a head topper, next as a toy/edible, and finally as a container and mold for soil.

Source: Discovery News