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Chimps Employ Culture to Branch Out.


On a new cable television program, trained chimpanzees mug their way through parodies of standard network fare. But don't underestimate these furry, lipstick-smeared thespians. Far from the broadcast jungle's lowbrow hijinks hi·jinks  
pl.n.
Variant of high jinks.

Noun 1. hijinks - noisy and mischievous merrymaking
high jinks, high jinx, jinks

jollification, merrymaking, conviviality - a boisterous celebration; a merry festivity
, wild chimpanzees develop rich sets of cultural traditions that have much in common with human culture, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a synthesis of decades of field observations.

Other than humans, only chimps show a documented penchant for passing on styles of tool use, grooming, and other behaviors through teaching and imitation, contends a group of researchers led by Andrew Whiten of the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. The mix of cultural traditions varies across chimp communities, add the scientists, including famed chimp researcher Jane Goodall Noun 1. Jane Goodall - English zoologist noted for her studies of chimpanzees in the wild (born in 1934)
Goodall
 of Tanzania's Gombe Stream Research Centre in Kigoma.

Such assertions have long inspired debate over the nature of culture. Some scientists define culture as a product of language and thus unique to humans.

"Chimpanzee chimpanzee, an ape, genus Pan, of the equatorial forests of central and W Africa. The common chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes, lives N of the Congo River. Full-grown animals of this species are up to 5 ft (1.  culture represents a step on the ladder between what most animals do and what humans do," holds Richard W. Wrangham of Harvard University, a coauthor of the new report. It appears in the June 17 NATURE.

Whiten's team focused on seven groups of common chimps observed in Africa for periods ranging from 8 to 38 years. The researchers defined a cultural act as one performed regularly by several members of one or a few--but not all--groups. Careful review of studies yielded 39 such behaviors that were potentially available to all the communities.

Chimps' cultural traditions included cracking nuts by using pieces of wood as hammer and anvil anvil

Iron block on which metal is placed for shaping, originally by hand with a hammer. The blacksmith's anvil is usually of wrought iron (sometimes of cast iron), with a smooth working surface of hardened steel.
, sucking ants off sticks, clasping clasp·ing  
adj. Botany
Denoting a leaf whose base partially or completely surrounds a stem.
 a comrade's arms overhead, and slapping tree branches to get attention.

Whether such acts spread via imitation or other learning is unclear, Whiten says. Scientists also know little about how chimps invent traditions (SN: 6/5/99, p. 364).

Nevertheless, the study underscores a growing willingness to grant chimps at least rudimentary cultural capacities (SN: 12/12/98, p. 374). Moreover, field-workers continue to uncover chimp cultural practices, adding to those that Whiten's group tallied (SN: 5/15/99, p. 315).

"The evidence is overwhelming that chimpanzees have a remarkable ability to invent new customs and technologies, and that they pass these on socially rather than genetically," remarks Frans B.M. de Waal of Emory University in Atlanta in a commentary accompanying the group's report.

In a noncultural example of mental sophistication so·phis·ti·cate  
v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates

v.tr.
1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly.

2.
, de Waal and Emory coworker co·work·er or co-work·er  
n.
One who works with another; a fellow worker.
 Lisa A. Parr report that chimps recognize facial similarities between unfamiliar chimp mothers and their sons, but not between chimp mothers and their daughters. This ability may help females--who migrate to nearby groups at puberty--to dampen inbreeding inbreeding, mating of closely related organisms. Inbreeding is chiefly used as a means of insuring the preservation of specific desired traits among the offspring of purebred animals (see breeding).  by avoiding communities in which many males look like their mothers, the researchers propose in the same issue of NATURE.

Chimps' cultural affinity with humans has a particular poignancy, Whiten says. "Chimpanzees are dying out, partly due to a thriving bush-meat trade in Africa. Our research accentuates the need to preserve wild chimps," he says.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:research on chimpanzee culture
Author:Bower, B.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jun 19, 1999
Words:490
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