Chimps use 'specialised tool kits' to catch army ants.Byline: ANI Washington, September 3 (ANI): A new study has shown that chimpanzees in Congo use "specialised tool kits" to catch army ants. Published in the American Journal of Primatology pri·ma·tol·o·gy n. The branch of zoology that deals with the study of primates. pri ma·to·log , the study
suggests that chimpanzees have developed a 'sustainable' way
of harvesting food.
Led by Dr Crickette Sanz, researchers associated with the Goualougo Triangle The Goualougo Triangle, is a 100-square-mile region on the southern end of the Nouabale-Ndoki National Park, located in the Republic of Congo, in Central Africa. The northern Congo lowland forest ecosystem of the park is one of the most intact fauna habitats of its type in Africa. Ape Project studied several communities of 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. throughout the Nouabale-Ndoki national park in the Republic of Congo. After spending a collective 111 months in the Goualougo Triangle, the researchers recovered 1,060 tools, and collected 25 video recordings of chimpanzees using them to forage forage Vegetable food, including corn and hay, of wild or domestic animals. Harvested, processed, and stored forage is called silage. Forage should be harvested in early maturity to avoid a decrease in protein and fibre content as crops mature. for army ants. "The use of tool sets is rare and has most often been observed in great apes. Until now there have been no reports of regular use of more than one type of tool to prey upon army ants," said Sanz. Chimpanzees are already known to use tools when foraging for honey or collecting termites, but the variation in techniques and their relationship with the ants has perplexed scientists for decades. "In other studies, based across Africa, chimpanzees have been seen to prey on To take prey from; to despoil; to pillage; to rob To seize as prey; to take for food by violence; to seize and devour. - Shak. To wear away gradually; to cause to waste or pine away; as, the trouble preyed upon his mind s>. - Shak. See also: Prey Prey Prey army ants both with and without tools, and it was inexplicable why some chimpanzees used different techniques to gather the same prey," said Sanz. The team revealed that 36 per cent of sets recovered by them contained two types of tools, nest perforating tools and ant-dipping probes. The chimpanzee inserts a an ant-dipping probe into a nest or column of ants and gathers the individuals who stream up the tool. The perforating tools, on the other hand, are used to open nests so the chimpanzee can gather the ants within. The rsearchers admitted that the tools observed during the present study were similar to other recorded tools, but added that their findings suggested that chimpanzees were selecting tools depending on the characteristics of the ant species they are foraging. Chimpanzees that harvest ants simply by raking a nest open with their hands cause a massive counter-attack from the ants, and this also results in the ants to migrating and building a new nest at a different location. However, by using the perforation per·fo·ra·tion n. 1. The act of perforating or the state of being perforated. 2. An abnormal opening in a hollow organ or viscus, as one made by rupture or injury. Perforation A hole. tools the chimps can entice the ants out and can allow the insertion of the second tool for dipping. This not only reduces the ant's aggressive behaviour, but may also be a "sustainable harvesting" technique because the ants will stay in that location allowing the chimpanzees to revisit this renewable source of food. "It has only recently been discovered that these particular chimpanzees use several different types of tool sets which could be their cultural signature of sorts. There is an urgency to learn about these behaviours as the existence of the apes in the Congo Basin is threatened by commercial logging, bushmeat Bushmeat (calque from the French viande de brousse) is the term commonly used for meat of terrestrial wild animals, killed for subsistence or commercial purposes throughout the humid tropics of the Americas, Asia and Africa. hunting, and emerging diseases," concluded co-author Dr. David Morgan David Morgan may refer to:
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