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Saturday, March 14, 2009

Robert Sapolsky gives an entertaining and informative lecture on primate sexuality. Who knew academic sex could be so much fun.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

I'm back at my desk after a few days visiting family. Catching up on my feeds I came across this and then this. Primates never cease to amaze.

Arts & Letters Daily - ideas, criticism, debate

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

I almost forgot to post on this.
A particularly cunning seven-year-old chimp named Ayumu has bested university students at a game of memory. He and two other young chimps recalled the placement of numbers flashed onto a computer screen faster and more accurately than humans.

"It's a very simple fact: chimpanzees are better than us -- at this task," says Tetsuro Matsuzawa, a primatologist at Kyoto University in Japan who led the study.

The work doesn't mean that chimps are 'smarter' than humans, but rather they seem to be better at memorizing a snapshot view of their surroundings ? whether that be numbers on a screen or ripe figs dangling from a tree. Humans may have lost this capacity in exchange for gaining the brainpower to understand language and complex symbols, says Matsuzawa.
What really impressed me was that the memory task involved not just dangling figs but numbers on a screen. Though they were trained to "recognize" numeric symbols, they still faced a short-term memory task with these newly acquired kinds of stimuli that are not normally part of their home environment.

Chimp beats students at computer game : Nature News

Monday, October 15, 2007

The local customs that define human cultures in important ways also exist in the ape world, suggests a study reported online June 7th in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. Indeed, captive chimpanzees, like people, can readily acquire new traditions, and those newly instituted "cultural practices" can spread to other troops.
Not all "the local customs that define human cultures in important ways," to be sure. More... 'Cultured' chimpanzees pass on novel traditions

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Yes, 'talk' belongs inside scare quotation marks. Breaking news from ABC:
The Great Ape Trust in Des Moines, Iowa, is home to seven bonobos -- a close relative of the chimpanzee -- and three orangutans. But if you think Iowa might be a strange place for them to live, don't say it out loud -- these apes understand English.
Watch the video and you'll see John Berman say 'ice' in the presence of Kanzi (the famous bonobo) and Kanzi points to 'ice' on his screen of symbols. Given that threshhold of understanding, my laptop understands English. There are surely more impressive examples of communication than this. This illustration only serves to ridicule what apes/chimps can do with language and communication. Must be a slow news day in science.

ABC News: Amazing Science: Apes 'Talk' to Humans

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Science Now posts a short article on chimps and bonobos.
Chimpanzees and bonobos are our closest primate relatives, but the two apes have very different personalities. While primatologists have often noted nasty, competitive behavior among power-hungry chimps, bonobos have a reputation as free-loving peaceniks. Now, a behavioral study that directly compares the two apes suggests that the bonobos' more cordial nature enables them to cooperate more successfully than chimps in some situations.
On a number of tests bonobos show greater inclination to cooperate and share than chimps. (Humans look to see who's watching.)

Score One for the Sociable Ape -- Miller 2007 (308): 2 -- ScienceNOW

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

This AP article suggests there may be as few as 5,000 bonobos left in the Congo, down from over 100,000 in 1984. The big problem is that they are frequently hunted for food.
... for poor villagers, bonobos can be lucrative business, with much of the meat heading for expensive, clandestine meals at restaurants in the cities.

One bonobo can earn $200 for Richard Ipaka, a 50-year-old part-time poacher who lives in the provincial capital, Mbandaka.

"That's enough money for two months," he said.

Like many Congolese, he said he did not know bonobos are found in the wild only in his country. And like many others, he was skeptical that the ape is endangered.

"Our ancestors have been eating bonobos for centuries. How could they disappear?" Ipaka said.
There are three motivations for the continued hunting mentioned here: economics, ignorance, and tradition. If it is important enough to us--the third chimpanzee--, then we should be able to address all three. On the other hand, we're the chimpanzee for whom a good burger is often considered better than sex.

`Hippie Chimps' Fast Disappearing in Congo - Forbes.com