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Chimpanzee Culture & Intelligence

Two responses to Chris Knights article at: http://weeklyworker.co.uk/worker/1045/letters/

Distorted
Chris Knight gives a completely distorted picture of Noam Chomsky’s view on the origin of human language. Knight claims that Chomsky is “arguing that humans are so utterly different from apes or monkeys that the question of evolution is irrelevant” (‘What can chimpanzees teach us about human nature?’, February 5). ...

Losses and gains
In his discussion of the basis for human nature, I’m glad to see Chris Knight is focusing on the bonobos, those smaller relatives of the chimps. I also find myself convinced by his speculation about the differences between the two primate groups being down to the difference in food habitat. ...
 
A judge in New York has issued a writ of habeas corpus in a case brought by animal rights activists on behalf of two chimpanzees.

The order means the university holding the chimpanzees will have to respond to the activists' petition in court.

The activists said the court had "implicitly determined" that the two chimpanzees are legal "persons".

However, other experts say the writ may simply be a way of the court gathering more information at a further hearing. ...

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-32396497
 
Reading about Noam Chomsky, always reminds me of Nim Chimpsky - a mainstay piece of research that set out to test the claims made by previous researchers into teaching apes language http://www.npr.org/2011/07/20/138467156/project-nim-a-chimps-very-human-very-sad-life
I would love to have come up with that name.
As for bonobos being different to common chimps this is certainly true. Demonstrated by good old Kanzi and the fact that he actually acquired human language abilities equivalent to a 3 year old child. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/speaking-bonobo-134931541/?no-ist
This is an old link, and currently Savage-Rumbaugh is actually suspended from her job at the moment amongst accusations of putting the animals in danger due to her erratic behaviour.
Bonobos also have a completely different attitude to sex than common chimps do, they basically do it all the time and just for fun. They also mate face to face and have homosexual sex. Their sex drive has led to some amusing trips with sixth formers to Twycross zoo.
I love love love Comparative Psychology.
 
A campaign by animal rights activists to establish the legal personhood of chimpanzees took a bizarre turn this week, when a New York judge inadvertently opened a constitutional can of worms only to clamp it shut a day later. On 20 April, New York Supreme Court Justice Barbara Jaffe signed an order forcing Stony Brook University to respond to claims by the Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP) that two research chimpanzees, Hercules and Leo, were being unlawfully detained. The Coral Springs, Florida, organization declared victory, claiming that because such an order, termed a writ of habeas corpus, can only be granted to a person in New York state, the judge had implicitly determined that the chimps were legal persons.

An eruption of news coverage on 21 April sparked a backlash by legal experts claiming the significance of the order had been overblown. By that evening, Jaffe had amended the order, letting arguments on the chimps’ detainment go forward but explicitly scratching out the words WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS at the top of the document. Nature takes a look at the episode’s significance in the campaign to give animals legal rights and what it means for the research community. ...

http://www.nature.com/news/chimpanzee-personhood-case-sows-confusion-1.17398
 
A New York court will resume hearing a case this week about the possible illegal detention of two chimps at a university lab.

Lawyers acting for the chimps, Leo and Hercules, want them to be moved to an animal sanctuary. Researchers at Stony Brook University are using the chimps for research on physical movement.

In a potentially significant ruling Judge Barbara Jaffe at one stage suggested the chimps had the right of habeas corpus - the ancient legal principle under which the state has an obligation to produce missing individuals before a court.

But having initially used the words "habeas corpus", the judge subsequently struck them out, suggesting the court does not consider the animals to be legal persons.

Hercules and Leo's lawyers say they are not too dispirited as the court is still asking the university to justify why they are holding the chimps. ...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-32854504?ocid=socialflow_twitter
 
Chimpanzees found to drink alcoholic plant sap in wild
By Victoria Gill Science reporter, BBC News
[Video]

They have shown an understanding of language and a sense of fairness, and now humans' closest primate cousins have even been found to share a taste for alcohol.
Scientists studying chimpanzees in the Republic of Guinea have seen evidence of long-term and recurrent ingestion of ethanol by apes.
The 17-year study recorded chimps using leaves to drink fermented palm sap.
Some drank enough alcohol to produce "visible signs of inebriation".
The study - published in the journal Royal Society Open Science - revealed their tipple of choice is naturally fermented palm wine, produced by raffia palm trees.

In the Bossou area of Guinea, where this research took place, some local people harvest "palm wine" from the trees - tapping them at the crown, and gathering the sap in plastic containers, which they collect in the mornings and evenings.
Researchers working in the area had already witnessed chimpanzees climbing the trees - often in groups - and drinking the naturally fermented palm sap.
The chimpanzees use leaf sponges in their palm wine "drinking sessions"
The chimps used drinking tools called leaf sponges - handfuls of leaves that they chew and crush into absorbent sponges, dip into the liquid and suck out the contents.

To work out the extent of the animals' indulging, the scientists measured the alcohol content of the wine in the containers and filmed the chimps' "drinking sessions".
The research team, led by Dr Kimberley Hockings from Oxford Brookes University and the Centre for Research in Anthropology in Portugal, worked out that the sap was about 3% alcohol by volume.
"Some individuals were estimated to have consumed about 85ml of alcohol," she said, "the equivalent to 8.5 UK units [approximately equal to a bottle of wine]".
"[They] displayed behavioural signs of inebriation, including falling asleep shortly after drinking.
"On another occasion after drinking palm wine, one adult male chimpanzee seemed particularly restless.
"While other chimpanzees were making and settling into their night nests, he spent an additional hour moving from tree to tree in an agitated manner. Again pure speculation, but it's certainly something we would like to collect further data on in the future," the researcher told BBC News.

Alcohol can be toxic, and although there have been unconfirmed anecdotes of non-human primates consuming it in the wild, this is the first time that researchers have recorded and measured voluntary alcohol consumption in any wild ape.
In addition, chimpanzees' apparent taste for a tipple adds to an evolutionary story about humans' common predilection for alcohol. Another recent study by Matthew Carrigan, from Santa Fe College in the US, showed that humans and African apes shared a genetic mutation that enabled them to effectively metabolise ethanol.
Prof Richard Byrne, an evolutionary biologist from the University of St Andrews, commented that the evolutionary origin of that gene could be that it "opened access to good energy sources - all that simple sugar - that were accidentally 'protected' by noxious alcohol".
"And presumably, whatever its evolutionary origin, it is that adaptation which makes me able to enjoy a good malt," he added. :D

...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-33050939
 
I remember seeing a a documentary years ago that featured hung over chimps, think it was Beautiful People.
 
Tool use is 'innate' in chimpanzees but not bonobos, their closest evolutionary relative
Date:
June 16, 2015
Source:
University of Cambridge
Summary:
First evidence for a species difference in the innate predisposition for tool use in our closest evolutionary cousins could provide insight into how humans became the ultimate tool-using ape.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150616072318.htm
 
I wonder what it tastes like. Shame we cant grow those trees over here cos I would a few in my back garden :)
 
Bonobos can be just as handy as chimpanzees. In fact, bonobos' tool-using abilities look a lot like those of early humans, suggesting that observing them could teach anthropologists about how our own ancestors evolved such skills.

Until now, bonobos have been more renowned for their free and easy sex livesthan their abilities with tools. They have never been seen to forage using tools in the wild, although only a handful of wild populations have been studied because of political instability in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where they live.

As for those in captivity, Itai Roffman of Haifa University in Israel and his colleagues previously observed one captive bonobo, called Kanzi, using stone tools to crack open
artx_video.gif
a log and extract food. However, it was possible that Kanzi was a lone genius, raised by humans and taught sign language, as well as once being shown how to use tools. ...

http://www.newscientist.com/article...pid=SOC|NSNS|2015-GLOBAL-twitter#.VZ0D-PmrTIV
 
Kanzi wasn't actually taught sign language, but instead was taught to use a lexigram....... just like to be factually correct. A lexigram is a board with abstract symbols representing various words, so now you know. He could understand sign language which was used alongside the lexigram and also understands human language, but largely it's all about the lexigram.
 
New study shows how complex bonobo communication is similar to that of human infants
August 4, 2015
Researchers at the University of Birmingham, UK and the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland, have found that wild bonobos, our closest living relatives in the primate world, communicate in a similar manner to human infants, using a high-pitched call type, or ‘peep’, that requires context to be understood.

The finding that bonobos use a type of call, that alters meaning depending on context, echoes the context independent manner in which human babies can also communicate.


Bonobos make ‘peep’ calls which are short, very high-pitched and produced with a closed mouth. They produce these calls in a wide range of situations, across positive, negative and neutral circumstances.


Read more at http://www.deepstuff.org/new-study-...to-that-of-human-infants/#zcYuerq1SldmslsJ.99
 
Different dialects perhaps?

An analysis of chimpanzee and bonobo gestures suggests that if the two apes ever come face to face, they would probably be able to understand each other .

Kirsty Graham, of the University of York, UK, and her team determined the meaning of 33 different gestures made by bonobos, and compared them with those made by chimpanzees.

The two species diverged from each other at least a million years ago, but the team found that the their gestures are more similar than would be expected by chance. “Bonobos and chimpanzees share not only the physical form of the gestures, but also many gesture meanings,” they say.

This may suggest that primate gestures are at least partially determined by biology. The team plans to investigate whether humans also share some of these gestures.

https://www.newscientist.com/articl...himps-and-bonobos-use-similar-sign-languages/
 
Clingy Bonobo mums.

In what may be the bonobo take on a fussy mom giving her son's number to a nice, single woman at the grocery store, female bonobos go to extremes to make sure their sons mate, introducing them to fertile females and even standing guard while the two couple up, according to a new study.

Researchers already knew that mothers of chimpanzees—bonobos’ close evolutionary cousins—help their sons in male-on-male fights for dominance. Yet bonobo females, who get their pick of mates, take things even further. Because a few select, high-ranking males tend to monopolize the mating pool in their matriarchal society, lower-ranking males are essentially forced out.

Not ones to leave their genetic legacies to chance, the mothers of male bonobos bring their sons around to fertile females and introduce them, according to researcher observations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/201...ly_2019-05-20&et_rid=394299689&et_cid=2824996
 
"Dad, do you know the piano's on my foot?"

"You hum it, son, I'll play it."
 
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