• Title of article

    Bearded capuchin monkeysʹ and a humanʹs efficiency at cracking palm nuts with stone tools: field experiments

  • Author/Authors

    D. FRAGASZY، نويسنده , , Kevin T. Pickering، نويسنده , , Q. Liu، نويسنده , , P. Izar، نويسنده , , E. Ottoni، نويسنده , , E. Visalberghi، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    321
  • To page
    332
  • Abstract
    Wild bearded capuchins, Cebus libidinosus, in Fazenda Boa Vista, Brazil crack tough palm nuts using hammer stones. We analysed the contribution of intrinsic factors (body weight, behaviour), size of the nuts and the anvil surface (flat or pit) to the efficiency of cracking. We provided capuchins with local palm nuts and a single hammer stone at an anvil. From video we scored the capuchinsʹ position and actions with the nut prior to each strike, and outcomes of each strike. The most efficient capuchin opened 15 nuts per 100 strikes (6.6 strikes per nut). The least efficient capuchin that succeeded in opening a nut opened 1.32 nuts per 100 strikes (more than 75 strikes per nut). Body weight and diameter of the nut best predicted whether a capuchin would crack a nut on a given strike. All the capuchins consistently placed nuts into pits. To provide an independent analysis of the effect of placing the nut into a pit, we filmed an adult human cracking nuts on the same anvil using the same stone. The human displaced the nut on proportionally fewer strikes when he placed it into a pit rather than on a flat surface. Thus the capuchins placed the nut in a more effective location on the anvil to crack it. Nut cracking as practised by bearded capuchins is a striking example of a plastic behaviour where costs and benefits vary enormously across individuals, and where efficiency requires years to attain.
  • Keywords
    Cebus libidinosus , Efficiency , hammer stone , Human , nut cracking , palm nut , tool use , Anvil , capuchin , Body weight
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Record number

    1283390