Chimps hunt using spears

Rory's picture
| | | |

thanks Ran Prieur for the link.

from here:  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6387611.stm

Chimpanzees 'hunt using spears'  Current Biology Chimps sharpened the spears with their teethChimpanzees in Senegal have been observed making and using wooden spears to hunt other primates, according to a study in the journal Current Biology.

Researchers documented 22 cases of chimps fashioning tools to jab at smaller primates sheltering in cavities of hollow branches or tree trunks.

The report's authors, Jill Pruetz and Paco Bertolani, said the finding could have implications for human evolution.

Chimps had not been previously observed hunting other animals with tools.

Pruetz and Bertolani made the discovery at their research site in Fongoli, Senegal, between March 2005 and July 2006.

"There were hints that this behaviour might occur, but it was one time at a different site," said Jill Pruetz, assistant professor of anthropology at Iowa State University, US.

"While in Senegal for the spring semester, I saw about 13 different hunting bouts. So it really is habitual."

Jabbing weapon

Chimpanzees were observed jabbing the spears into hollow trunks or branches, over and over again. After the chimp removed the tool, it would frequently smell or lick it.

In the vast majority of cases, the chimps used the tools in the manner of a spear, not as probes. The researchers say they were using enough force to injure an animal that may have been hiding inside.

However, they did not photograph the behaviour, or capture it on film.

 Iowa State University Adolescent females exhibited the behaviour most frequently (Image: M Gaspersic)In one case, Pruetz and Bertolani, from the Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies in Cambridge, UK, witnessed a chimpanzee extract a bushbaby with a spear.

In most cases, the Fongoli chimpanzees carried out four or more steps to manufacture spears for hunting.

In all but one of the cases, chimps broke off a living branch to make their tool. They would then trim the side branches and leaves.

In a number of cases, chimps also trimmed the ends of the branch and stripped it of bark. Some chimps also sharpened the tip of the tool with their teeth.

Female lead

Adult males have long been regarded as the hunters in chimp groups.

But the authors of the paper in Current Biology said females, particularly adolescent females, and young chimps in general were seen exhibiting this behaviour more frequently than adult males.

"It's classic in primates that when there is a new innovation, particularly in terms of tool use, the younger generations pick it up very quickly. The last ones to pick up are adults, mainly the males," said Dr Pruetz, who led the National Geographic Society-funded project.

This is because young chimps pick the skill up from their mothers, with whom they spend a lot of their time.

"It's a niche that males seem to ignore," Dr Pruetz told BBC News.

Many areas where chimpanzees live are also home to the red colobus monkey, which the chimps hunt. However, the Senegal site is lacking in this species, so chimps may have needed to adopt a new hunting strategy to catch a different prey - bushbaby.

The authors conclude that their findings support a theory that females may have played a similarly important role in the evolution of tool technology among early humans.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Ghost's picture

Impossible

This sort of thing is not only impossible, it's insulting. Quite clearly, humans are special and above all animals and last time I checked, chimps were just animals. Tool use is as much a unique human gift as is the entire planet; to do with as we please. To suggest that a mere animal could possess a human ability is disgusting, irresponsible and reprehensible. For shame.

Peace and Love and Empathy,

Matt 

JJ.Halberstadt's picture

Inquiring minds want to know

So if bush doesn't re-instate the draft, and since so many countries are pulling troops, how soon will it be before these chimps trained and sent to Iran? :T-JJ

afokenr's picture

It's interesting to note

It's interesting to note that this is primarily a female chimp skill. This reminds me of something else I was reading regarding the historical record of Northwest coastal aboriginal people. The record has holes in it because the historians who collected important anthropological data when it was still fresh and uncorrupted by The Dominant Culture focused mainly on male activities like hunting and fishing. Female skills may not have been seen to be as important to be thoroughly recorded. It's an injustice that we pay for with the loss of important cultural information. A mind clouded by patriarchal arrogance would never accept that the use of weapons that we take for granted probably evolved from the need for females to adapt to a disparity in speed and strength between the sexes. The spear was invented by woman. I think that's cool.

_______________________________

- Parge

crows use tools too