Individual acquisition of "stick pounding" behavior by naive chimpanzees

被引:22
作者
Bandini, Elisa [1 ]
Tennie, Claudio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tubingen, Dept Early Prehist & Quaternary Ecol, D-72070 Tubingen, Germany
关键词
chimpanzee behavior; individual learning; social learning; tool-use; zone of latent solutions; STONE HANDLING BEHAVIOR; PAN-TROGLODYTES-VERUS; SPONTANEOUS TOOL-USE; CAPUCHIN MONKEYS; WILD CHIMPANZEES; GORILLA-GORILLA; IMITATION; EVOLUTION; INTELLIGENCE; FOOD;
D O I
10.1002/ajp.22987
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Many studies investigating culture in nonhuman animals tend to focus on the inferred need of social learning mechanisms that transmit the form of a behavior to explain the population differences observed in wild animal behavioral repertoires. This research focus often results in studies overlooking the possibility of individuals being able to develop behavioral forms without requiring social learning. The disregard of individual learning abilities is most clearly observed in the nonhuman great ape literature, where there is a persistent claim that chimpanzee behaviors, in particular, require various forms of social learning mechanisms. These special social learning abilities have been argued to explain the acquisition of the relatively large behavioral repertoires observed across chimpanzee populations. However, current evidence suggests that although low-fidelity social learning plays a role in harmonizing and stabilizing the frequency of behaviors within chimpanzee populations, some (if not all) of the forms that chimpanzee behaviors take may develop independently of social learning. If so, they would be latent solutions-behavioral forms that can (re-)emerge even in the absence of observational opportunities, via individual (re)innovations. Through a combination of individual and low-fidelity social learning, the population-wide patterns of behaviors observed in great ape species are then established and stably maintained. This is the Zone of Latent Solutions (ZLS) hypothesis. The current study experimentally tested the ZLS hypothesis for pestle pounding, a wild chimpanzee behavior. We tested the reinnovation of this behavior in semi-wild chimpanzees at Chimfunshi Wildlife Orphanage in Zambia, Africa, (N = 90, tested in four social groups). Crucially, all subjects were naive to stick pounding before testing. Three out of the four tested groups reinnovated stick pounding-clearly demonstrating that this behavioral form does not require social learning. These findings provide support for the ZLS hypothesis alongside further evidence for the individual learning abilities of chimpanzees.
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页数:12
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