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Chimpanzees become expert nut-crackers faster than humans by Staff Writers Leipzig, Germany (SPX) Feb 07, 2019
Humans consider themselves as the tool user per excellence, and all known populations use them on a daily basis, although to different degrees. Previous work comparing human tool use skills to those of other species tended to place the animals in artificial conditions, removed from their natural environment. Such comparisons disadvantage the animals and are prone to underestimating the technological skills demonstrated by wild populations. In a first comparison between individuals of two groups of humans and chimpanzees, both cracking nuts naturally in their environment, we could test how quickly and how completely the technique was acquired by apprentices of the two species. The Tai chimpanzees, in Cote d'Ivoire, famous for their nut-cracking behavior, were compared to the Mbendjele BaYaka people who also habitually crack the same species of nuts, Panda oleosa, in the forest of the Republic of Congo. Following Mbendjele women groups as they forage in the forest, we used the same measures of efficiencies as used previously on the Tai chimpanzees to follow how the technique is acquired by both in the forest. In a previous study that was published in 2017 Boesch and his colleagues compared the efficiencies of the adult females in both species, revealing surprising similarities in the performances of the two populations, despite the use of different tools, i.e. the humans using sharp-cutting metal hammers and the chimpanzees stone hammers. In the present study, the "apprentices" of both species acquired the technique initially slowly, with similar kinds of mistakes, such as hitting the anvil directly with the nut, or placing the nut on the ground instead on the anvil, and both require years of practice to become experts. Christophe Boesch, director at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and lead author, said: "This study is the first to compare humans and chimpanzees performing the same technique in the forest, thereby ensuring that the two species possess the same level of prior experience with the tools used, the nuts, as well as the potential of observing experts pounding the nuts. In both species, prior experience is key to the acquisition of technical skills." However, even after correcting for differences in speed of maturation between the two species, chimpanzees acquired the technique more rapidly and reached adult efficiency earlier than humans. "Obviously, the Mbendjele people solve a lot more complex technical skills on a daily basis in the Congo forest, but it is intriguing to see that in one technical challenge, the technical skills are acquired more rapidly in chimpanzees than in humans. Nuts constitute an important part of the diet for many months each year in chimpanzees, while they may play a lesser role for humans, and so this could illustrate the power of the environment as a selective pressure for learning skills", concluded Boesch. Furthermore, teaching, which has regularly been proposed to be a unique human ability, was observed regularly in both species between experts and apprentices learning the technique. Nut-cracking is a relatively complex technique employing three distinct objects, the nut, the anvil and the hammer, that need to be arranged and used in a particular way to open the nuts without smashing them. The frequency of the teaching interactions observed in both species supports the idea that teaching facilitates the acquisition of a technique and should therefore be more frequent for complex behaviors in both species. The relatively similar level of teaching interactions in the two species and the more rapid acquisition of nut-cracking proficiency in chimpanzees come as a surprise given the assumption that humans are generally superior in tool-using skills. The authors stress that both chimpanzees and humans need to adapt to the challenge they face daily in the environment, and the more similar those are, the more similar the solutions and cognitive skills both species will develop. Similar natural comparisons in the future will add to the much-needed comparative assessment of the technical skills of the two species and allow assessment of how humans may truly differ in tool use.
Research Report: Learning curves and teaching when acquiring nut-cracking in humans and chimpanzees
The Caucasus: Complex interplay of genes and cultures Jena, Germany (SPX) Feb 05, 2019 An international research team, coordinated by the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (MPI-SHH) and the Eurasia Department of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI) in Berlin, is the first to carry out systematic genetic investigations in the Caucasus region. The study, published in Nature Communications, is based on analyses of genome-wide data from 45 individuals in the steppe and mountainous areas of the North Caucasus. The skeletal remains, which are between 6,500 and 3,5 ... read more
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