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Orangutans Said to Exhibit Hallmarks of Culture

January 2, 2003
By CAROL KAESUK YOON 




 

Orangutans, those red-haired, knuckle-dragging apes, are
loping today into the upper echelons of the hominid
hierarchy. According to research reported in the journal
Science, they exhibit what was until very recently
considered a uniquely human attribute: culture. 

Drawing on decades of research and hundreds of thousands of
hours of observations from six different sites in the wild,
an international team of scientists found evidence that
orangutan groups differ in everything from bedtime rituals
to eating habits to sexual practices - patterns of
behavior, passed from generation to generation, that
scientists call culture. 

Other researchers reported four years ago that chimpanzees
differ in the way they groom one another, hunt and eat ants
and so on. Scientists say the new work suggests that the
two remaining great ape species, gorillas and bonobos, are
likely to have culture as well and that great ape culture
dates back at least to the origin of the entire group 14
million years ago. 

The finding has been of particular interest as orangutans
have long been thought to be loners, leaving little
possibility for the creation of culture. Yet researchers
found that at one site all orangutans gave a Bronx cheer
before going to sleep, while at other sites this curious
ritual was absent. In some forests, orangutans had a
characteristic way of hunting and killing a beast known as
the slow loris or extracting seeds from the stinging fruit
of the Neesia tree. Yet in other forests where the loris
and Neesia were found, orangutans never took these meals.
And while in two forests, orangutans enjoyed masturbation
using sticks, elsewhere such behavior was unheard of. 

As is typical whenever scientists aim to award prized
attributes of Homo sapiens to other, wilder creatures,
there has been heated reaction. 

Some point out that while unlikely, it is possible that the
orangutans behave differently at different sites because of
undetected differences in their forest habitat. Some
scientists also object in principle to the use of the
heavily freighted term culture, which has long been used to
denote something peculiarly human - like wearing white
rather than black to funerals, say, or shaking hands rather
than kissing as a greeting. 

Further research on orangutan culture may be difficult,
however, because the species as a whole is threatened as
people steadily encroach on its habitats. 

But others said that great ape cultures were just the tip
of the iceberg. 

"In the coming 20 years, we will have a host of studies on
culture in all sorts of animals," said Dr. Frans de Waal,
primatologist at Emory University, saying data have been
coming in suggesting cultural differences among rats, birds
and even fish. "We will not think of culture as a
monolithic thing, but a concept that includes songbirds,
the great apes and human culture." 

The study grew out of a workshop that gathered orangutan
researchers who had worked for years in isolation from one
another at remote field sites on the islands of Borneo and
Sumatra, the only places orangutans can be found in the
wild. 

"You know your own animals and all of them do particular
things," said Dr. Carel van Schaik, biological
anthropologist at Duke University and lead author on the
paper. "So you think all orangutans do these things. Nobody
thought there'd be so much variation between the sites." 

Dr. van Schaik said there was no evidence of ecological
differences or genetic differences that would lead to such
differences in behavior. In addition, at sites where
orangutans spent more time together there were more of
these widespread behaviors, as would be expected with
behaviors that can be spread through association. In
addition, the closer sites were to one another, the more
behaviors those sites shared, again as would be expected. 

But Dr. Bennett Galef, animal behaviorist at McMaster
University, cautioned that it can be difficult to decipher
what is causing differences in behavior among populations
in the wild. 

For example, in a classic example of chimp culture,
chimpanzees are known to use very different methods for
extracting ants from ant nests in eastern and western
Africa. But in a recent study, researchers reported finding
a new group of chimpanzees that will use either method,
depending on how aggressive the ant they are hunting is.
Dr. Galef said the finding suggests that even this classic
chimp cultural divide might have a hidden ecological
explanation as simple as the difference in what kinds of
ants are available to chimps in different areas. 

Most work so far has relied on simply observing animals in
the wild. Dr. Galef said the only way to definitively
answer many of the key remaining questions will be through
experiments in the field. 

Unfortunately, researchers say some of the newly uncovered
cultures have likely already been destroyed. 

Dr. van Schaik said that one site in Sumatra, home of the
goodnight Bronx cheer and the hunting of the slow loris,
has been devastated over the past several years by an
intense wave of illegal logging despite being within a
national park. Another of his long-term study sites in
Borneo has been devastated by civil war and is still too
dangerous to return to. 

But even if he were able to go back, Dr. van Schaik said,
"probably all the orangutans we knew there are gone."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/02/science/02CND_APE.html?ex=1042543767&ei=1&en=af3b7751e0b1549b



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