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Tuesday, December 14, 2004
WRITER: Phil Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
SOURCE: Dorothy Fragaszy, 706/542-3036, doree@uga.edu
RESEARCH LED BY UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PROFESSOR REPORTS FIRST
ROUTINE TOOL USE BY WILD CAPUCHIN MONKEYS
ATHENS, Ga. – A team of researchers, led by University of
Georgia psychologist Dr. Dorothy Fragaszy, has just published the
first direct scientific report of tool use among a population of wild
capuchin monkeys. There have been reports of single instances of this
behavior but never of a whole population using tools routinely over
a long period of time.
Using remarkably heavy stones probably transported to an “anvil” site
in northeastern Brazil, these cat-sized monkeys routinely crack palm
nuts, which grow in clusters close to the ground. Though this nut-cracking
behavior has been common knowledge among local residents for years,
this is the first scientific report to confirm a behavior previously
studied only in wild populations of chimpanzees.
The study was just published online as the cover story in the American
Journal of Primatology and will be published in the hard-copy
version of that journal later this month. Co-authors of the journal
are Patricia Izar and Eduardo Ottoni of the University of São
Paulo, Elizabetta Visalberghi of the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche
in Rome, and Marino Gomes de Oliveira of the Fundacão BioBrasil
in Bahia, Brazil.
“One of the most significant things about this research is
that we see the behavior in an entire population and not in isolated
individuals,” said Fragaszy, who is considered one of the world’s
top experts on capuchin monkeys. “Also, it is the first time
this behavior has been observed in wild capuchins.”
Another study, just published in the journal Science, also
reports more generalized tool use among capuchins in a different area
of Brazil.
Fragaszy has studied the small, agile primates for years, and she
is co-author, with Visalberghi and Linda Fedigan of The Complete
Capuchin, just published by Cambridge University Press. She was
also president of the International Primatological Society from 2001-2004.
Fragaszy and her colleagues first saw evidence of tool use for nut-cracking
among Brazilian capuchins in a photo essay published in the February
2003 issue of BBC Wildlife magazine. The dramatic pictures
showed the monkeys lifting improbably large stones to crack palm nuts,
which had been put in scoured “anvil” areas that indicated
long-term use. When she traveled to the area in Brazil where the photographs
were taken, she wasn’t quite sure what to expect, but soon she
saw, from a blind built in front of a nut-cracking site, monkeys coming
to break open nuts with huge stones.
The study adds important new information to increasing knowledge
that human beings are not the only primates who use tools. At one
time, the use of tools was considered an important difference between
humans and other primates, but scientists some time ago discovered
that chimpanzees in the wild use tools in several ways.
“What we found is that these capuchins are extremely skilled
weightlifters,” said Fragaszy. “The video we took of them
cracking stones shows just how remarkable their ability to lift these
stones has become.”
A number of puzzles remain, some of which Fragaszy hopes to understand
better when she returns to the site in January. First of all, some
of the cracking stones are large, water-smoothed rocks, which aren’t
found in the immediate area. Where do they come from? Have the monkeys
transported them over a very long time?
Just as perplexing is a high rocky ridge nearby, on top of which
are several anvil sites and the remains of hundreds of cracked palm
nuts. Just how the small monkeys managed to lug the heavy stones to
the top remains a mystery. There are, in fact, many such ridges in
the area with anvil sites.
The site is a biological reserve operated by the Fundacão
BioBrasil in a dry woodland habitat in northeastern Brazil. While
it has become an ecotourism site for its healthy and often remarkable
bird population, the discovery of tool-using capuchins at the site,
which is more than an hour’s drive on poor roads from the nearest
town, adds a new layer of scientific richness to the area.
Interestingly, the researchers observed monkeys using two forms of
action to crack nuts. In one, the monkey sat or stood bipedally, held
the stone in both hands and raised and lowered the stone with arm
and shoulder movements. A more strenuous method involves a monkey
rising quickly to a nearly vertical position by standing explosively
and raising the stone to shoulder height before crashing it down on
the nut.
Though such behavior has been seen in captive capuchins, this is
the first report of it in a wild population.
(Writers please note: Dr. Fragaszy will be leaving for Brazil
in early January, where communication may be difficult, so those
wishing to interview her are urged to call or e-mail prior to the
end of the year.)
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