• Title of article

    THE WHINNY OF SPIDER MONKEYS: INDIVIDUAL RECOGNITION BEFORE SITUATIONAL MEANING

  • Author/Authors

    BYRNE، RICHARD W. نويسنده , , TElXIDOR، PATRICIA نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    -278
  • From page
    279
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    When spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) are dispersed and moving through wooded areas in the dry forest of Santa Rosa National Park in Costa Rica, they give loud calls, whinnies, that can be heard over long distances and appear to be answered with the same call from other monkeys. We examined the circumstances in which this vocalization was emitted and the responses elicited from other group members. A total of 105 h of continuous recordings on emission of whinnies, 113 h of individual focal samples and 291 spectrograms were analyzed from a study group with 15 identified subjects. Whinnies emitted in different circumstances caused different reactions. Whinnies provoked by the sight of an observer were never responded to in any particular way, while those given during resting or feeding sometimes caused an active response of approach or calling. Most strikingly, whinnies given during group movement provoked hearers to approach or call significantly more often than either those given while feeding or resting. Playback experiments found one response, ʹscanʹ, to differ according to the original circumstances of emission of the broadcast call: monkeys scanned more in the direction of the sound when hearing feeding rather than group movement whinnies.
  • Keywords
    chemosignals , ultrasonic vocalization. , mice , pups , fostering
  • Journal title
    BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
  • Record number

    21278