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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6481795.stm
Monkeys' stone percussion studied The capuchins appear to use noise to ward off potential predatorsResearch in Brazil has produced fresh evidence that primates may have something approaching human "culture". A scientist has observed capuchin monkeys banging stones together, apparently as a signalling device to ward off potential predators. The researcher says the animals appear to be learning this skill from each other - and even teaching incomers to the group how it should be done. The research is reported in the scientific journal Folia Primatologica. Dr Antonio Moura from the University of Cambridge, UK carried out his work in the Serra da Capivara National Park, in the Piaui state of north-east Brazil. Hard alerts The use of stone technology in foraging for food is well known in non-human primates; monkeys will use rocks to crack open nuts. ![]() Stone-banging could be a social tradition in the population studied ![]() Antonio Moura But this may be the first time they have been seen using stones to create a noise to keep predators away, and warn one another of potential danger. Dr Moura describes how the monkeys, as he approached several groups of them, would first search for a suitable loose stone, then hit it on a rock surface several times in an aggressive manner. Only as they became more used to his visits over time did the stone-banging decrease. Noisy lessons The scientist said he saw adults and juveniles hitting the stones together without paying him any attention at all - suggesting that the younger monkeys were learning the skill from their elders. What is more, captive monkeys released into the area to join the study animals appeared to learn to bang stones as well. "Although banging objects is an innate behaviour in capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella libidinosus), in all wild groups observed so far it has been observed only in a foraging context," Dr Moura said. "Stone-banging is a novel behavioural variant that is most likely learned socially. The absence of this display in other populations of capuchins, which have access to stones, suggests that stone-banging could be a social tradition in the population studied."
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My life is an open book; if you don't like the read, put me back on the shelf ....................
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#2
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I am surprized that no one has thought this worthwhile of a comment; I personally find it very interesting.
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My life is an open book; if you don't like the read, put me back on the shelf ....................
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#3
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Maybe it is because it is in such a remote sector of the forums.
I find it interesting, yet I do not know enough about evolution to make a proper comment.
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I gazed upon the girl. The wet hair.... the tears… those ******* tears. And the Antichrist stood on the sand of the sea and she beheld the beauty of the world. |
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