Baboon troop

Baboons watch neighbours for clues about food, but can end up in queues

20 April 2016

Baboons learn about food locations socially through monitoring the behaviour of those around them. While proximity to others is the key to acquiring information, research shows that accessing food depends on the complex hierarchies of a baboon troop, and those lower down the pecking order can end up queuing for leftovers.

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A black howler monkey chorus

Calls vs. balls: monkeys with more impressive roars produce less sperm

22 October 2015

Evolutionary ‘trade-off’ between size of throat and testes discovered in howler monkeys furthers Darwin’s theory of sexual selection and corresponds to mating systems: males with larger throats but smaller testes often have exclusive access to females, while those with larger testes share mates.    

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A chimpanzee uses a stone to crack a nut

Opportunity, and not necessity, is the mother of invention

12 November 2014

When food is scarce, tool use among non-human primates does not increase. This counterintuitive finding leads researchers to suggest that the driving force behind tool use is ecological opportunity – and that the environment shapes development of culture. 

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