Influence of food physical properties and environmental context on manipulative behaviors highlighted by new methodological approaches in zoo‐housed bonobos (Pan paniscus)

Author:

Gérard Caroline1ORCID,Bardo Ameline23ORCID,Guéry Jean Pascal4,Pouydebat Emmanuelle5,Narat Victor1,Simmen Bruno1

Affiliation:

1. Eco‐anthropologie (EA), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, CNRS Université Paris Cité Paris France

2. Histoire Naturelle de l'Homme Préhistorique (HNHP), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, CNRS Université Paris Cité Paris France

3. Department of Human Origins Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Leipzig Germany

4. La Vallée des Singes Romagne France

5. Mécanismes adaptatifs et évolution (MECADEV) Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, CNRS Paris France

Abstract

AbstractResearch on manipulative abilities in nonhuman primates, in the context of hominid evolution, has mostly focused on manual/pedal postures considered as static behaviors. While these behavioral repertoires highlighted the range of manipulative abilities in many species, manipulation is a dynamic process that mostly involves successive types of grips before reaching its goal. The present study aims to investigate the use of manual/pedal postures in zoo‐housed bonobos in diverse dynamic food processing by using an innovative approach: the optimal matching analysis that compares sequences (i.e., succession of grasping postures) with each other. To characterize the manipulative techniques spontaneously employed by bonobos, we performed this sequential analysis of manual/pedal postures during 766 complete feeding sequences of 17 individuals. We analyzed the effectiveness with a score defined by a partial proxy of food intake (i.e., the number of mouthfuls) linked to a handling score measuring both the diversity and changes of manual postures during each sequence. We identified four techniques, used differently depending on the physical substrate on which the individual performed food manipulation and the food physical properties. Our results showed that manipulative techniques were more complex (i.e., higher handling score) for large foods and on substrates with lower stability. But the effectiveness score was not significantly lower for these items since manipulative complexity seemed to be compensated by a greater number of mouthfuls. It appeared that the techniques employed involved a trade‐off between manipulative complexity and the amount of food ingested. This study allowed us to test and validate innovative analysis methods that are applicable to diverse ethological studies involving sequential events. Our results bring new data for a better understanding of the evolution of manual abilities in primates in association with different ecological contexts and both terrestrial and arboreal substrates and suggest that social and individual influences need to be explored further.

Publisher

Wiley

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