TY - JOUR
T1 - Call cultures in orang-utans?
AU - Wich, Serge A.
AU - Krützen, Michael
AU - Lameira, Adriano R.
AU - Nater, Alexander
AU - Arora, Natasha
AU - Bastian, Meredith L.
AU - Meulman, Ellen
AU - Morrogh-Bernard, Helen C.
AU - Utami Atmoko, S. Suci
AU - Pamungkas, Joko
AU - Perwitasari-Farajallah, Dyah
AU - Hardus, Madeleine E.
AU - van Noordwijk, Maria
AU - van Schaik, Carel P.
N1 - This work was supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), L.S.B. Leakey Foundation, National Geographic Society, Swiss National Science Foundation, Messerli Foundation, A.H.-Schultz Foundation, PanEco, Claraz-Schenkung, Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology, Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Dobberke Foundation, Lucie Burgers Foundation for Comparative Behaviour Research, Schure-Beijerinck-Popping Funds, Ruggles-Gates Fund for Anthropological Scholarship of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Primate Conservation, Inc., and Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian.
PY - 2012/5/7
Y1 - 2012/5/7
N2 - Background: Several studies suggested great ape cultures, arguing that human cumulative culture presumably evolved from such a foundation. These focused on conspicuous behaviours, and showed rich geographic variation, which could not be attributed to known ecological or genetic differences. Although geographic variation within call types (accents) has previously been reported for orang-utans and other primate species, we examine geographic variation in the presence/absence of discrete call types (dialects). Because orang-utans have been shown to have geographic variation that is not completely explicable by genetic or ecological factors we hypothesized that this will be similar in the call domain and predict that discrete call type variation between populations will be found.Methodology/Principal Findings: We examined long-term behavioural data from five orang-utan populations and collected fecal samples for genetic analyses. We show that there is geographic variation in the presence of discrete types of calls. In exactly the same behavioural context (nest building and infant retrieval), individuals in different wild populations customarily emit either qualitatively different calls or calls in some but not in others. By comparing patterns in call-type and genetic similarity, we suggest that the observed variation is not likely to be explained by genetic or ecological differences.Conclusion/Significance: These results are consistent with the potential presence of 'call cultures' and suggest that wild orang-utans possess the ability to invent arbitrary calls, which spread through social learning. These findings differ substantially from those that have been reported for primates before. First, the results reported here are on dialect and not on accent. Second, this study presents cases of production learning whereas most primate studies on vocal learning were cases of contextual learning. We conclude with speculating on how these findings might assist in bridging the gap between vocal communication in non-human primates and human speech.
AB - Background: Several studies suggested great ape cultures, arguing that human cumulative culture presumably evolved from such a foundation. These focused on conspicuous behaviours, and showed rich geographic variation, which could not be attributed to known ecological or genetic differences. Although geographic variation within call types (accents) has previously been reported for orang-utans and other primate species, we examine geographic variation in the presence/absence of discrete call types (dialects). Because orang-utans have been shown to have geographic variation that is not completely explicable by genetic or ecological factors we hypothesized that this will be similar in the call domain and predict that discrete call type variation between populations will be found.Methodology/Principal Findings: We examined long-term behavioural data from five orang-utan populations and collected fecal samples for genetic analyses. We show that there is geographic variation in the presence of discrete types of calls. In exactly the same behavioural context (nest building and infant retrieval), individuals in different wild populations customarily emit either qualitatively different calls or calls in some but not in others. By comparing patterns in call-type and genetic similarity, we suggest that the observed variation is not likely to be explained by genetic or ecological differences.Conclusion/Significance: These results are consistent with the potential presence of 'call cultures' and suggest that wild orang-utans possess the ability to invent arbitrary calls, which spread through social learning. These findings differ substantially from those that have been reported for primates before. First, the results reported here are on dialect and not on accent. Second, this study presents cases of production learning whereas most primate studies on vocal learning were cases of contextual learning. We conclude with speculating on how these findings might assist in bridging the gap between vocal communication in non-human primates and human speech.
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0036180
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0036180
M3 - Article
C2 - 22586464
AN - SCOPUS:84860641854
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 7
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
IS - 5
M1 - e36180
ER -