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Cries and Greetings.


Baboon baboon, any of the large, powerful, ground-living monkeys of the genus Papio, also called dog-faced monkeys. Five subspecies live in Africa, with one species extending into the Arabian peninsula.  intimacy and detachment present vexing clues

There are a million stories in the naked jungle. Some of the strangest ones take place on the savanna savanna or savannah (both: səvăn`ə), tropical or subtropical grassland lying on the margin of the trade wind belts.  street corners where baboons hang out. People need look no further for weird, even kinky kink·y  
adj. kink·i·er, kink·i·est
1. Tightly twisted or curled: kinky hair.

2.
, tales of life among the feral feral

untamed; often used in the sense of having escaped from domesticity and run wild.
, fierce, and furry.

Baboons' odd practices offer more than vicarious vicarious /vi·car·i·ous/ (vi-kar´e-us)
1. acting in the place of another or of something else.

2. occurring at an abnormal site.


vi·car·i·ous
adj.
1.
 thrills for nature buffs, though. In the wild, these regal-looking, powerfully built monkeys behave in ways that raise intriguing questions about what goes on in their minds.

Consider this peculiar sight: An adult male baboon strides stiff-legged up to another male while flashing a "let's-make-nice" facial expression facial expression,
n the use of the facial muscles to communicate or to convey mood.
, turns around, and permits the other fellow to briefly touch his genitals. In the macho world of male baboons, guys otherwise avoid each other between the skirmishes that determine the privileges of social authority, such as prime access to mates. Why would the greeting monkey place his reproductive future literally in the palm of an opponent's hand?

Adult female baboons exhibit a perplexing per·plex  
tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es
1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate.
 habit of their own. Understandably, they often emit a full-throated barking sound if separated from either their troop or their infants. However, if a youngster that has wandered off starts screeching in distress, its mother stays mum. Sure, she looks toward her child's call and may rush off in that direction. Yet despite the threat of predators and infanticide-minded male baboons, the mom refuses to employ the search tactic of calling back and forth with the disoriented dis·o·ri·ent  
tr.v. dis·o·ri·ent·ed, dis·o·ri·ent·ing, dis·o·ri·ents
To cause (a person, for example) to experience disorientation.

Adj. 1.
 tyke. Why not reach out and bark to someone?

Separate research teams are trying to figure out what these puzzling behaviors signify about baboons' mental states. Preliminary explanations vary widely in their implications for how the animals think.

"Male baboons engage in common, highly variable, and complex ritual greetings," asserts anthropologist Barbara B. Smuts of the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries.  in Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, city (1990 pop. 109,592), seat of Washtenaw co., S Mich., on the Huron River; inc. 1851. It is a research and educational center, with a large number of government and industrial research and development firms, many in high-technology fields such as . "We know little about these rituals, but they're a rich source of information about how baboons communicate and think."

Smuts suspects that trust builds from successful completion of greetings, which are most common among older males. Such salutations may even act as a nonverbal promise to help each other in driving young, dominant males away from sexually receptive females. After dispatching a young suitor SUITOR. One who is a party to a suit or action in court. One who is a party to an action. In its ancient sense, suitor meant one Who was bound to attend the county court, also, one who formed part of the secta. (q.v.) , members of these "over-the-hill" gangs alternate in approaching the female.

In contrast, female baboons' silence in the face of their lost infants' cries suggests that these adult monkeys fail to grasp that other individuals have thoughts and feelings, contends psychologist Drew Rendall of the University of Lethbridge in Alberta.

"Complicated-looking behavior in baboons, including male greetings, may not require sophisticated social and cognitive capacities," he says.

Monkeys and apes--even chimpanzees trained to use simple languages--remain mute on the subject of whether they ponder either their own thoughts or those of others. Until several years ago, many scientists were receptive to the idea that a variety of nonhuman primates can understand, to some extent, that they and others have motives and intentions.

A new breed of laboratory experiments, however, has challenged that assumption (SN: 1/20/96, p. 42). For example, when confronted with two people pointing to different cups, chimpanzees choose randomly and don't seem to realize that they can snag a snack by heeding the person whom they previously saw hiding food under one of the cups.

Although groups of chimps appear to pass on their own traditions of tool use and social communication (SN: 6/19/99, p. 388), monkeys may not do so. Field observations have yielded no conclusive evidence CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE. That which cannot be contradicted by any other evidence,; for example, a record, unless impeached for fraud, is conclusive evidence between the parties. 3 Bouv. Inst. n. 3061-62.  that monkeys impute impute v. 1) to attach to a person responsibility (and therefore financial liability) for acts or injuries to another, because of a particular relationship, such as mother to child, guardian to ward, employer to employee, or business associates.  thoughts or emotions to others, intentionally imitate what others do, or teach each other even simple food-gathering skills.

Still, it's too early to draw firm conclusions about the mental workings of non-human primates, Smuts says. Greetings between pairs of male baboons provide glimpses of what look to Smuts like learned performances. Each greeting incorporates a set of conventional behaviors while still allowing for on-the-spot negotiations about who does what to whom and how far to go.

Smuts and anthropologist John M. Watanabe of Dartmouth College Dartmouth College, at Hanover, N.H.; coeducational; chartered 1769, opened 1770, the ninth colonial college (see Wheelock, Eleazar). Originally a men's college, Dartmouth began admitting women in 1972.  in Hanover, N.H., have documented, over a 4-month period, 637 greetings among 12 adult males in a troop of 150 baboons in Kenya. Smuts has also videotaped 400 such greetings in another baboon troop of comparable size.

Watanabe summarized his and Smuts' findings in February at the Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), private organization devoted to furthering the work of scientists and improving the effectiveness of science in the promotion of human welfare.  in Washington, D.C.

A typical greeting begins with one male walking upright rapidly toward another with a straight-legged, rolling stride. The approaching male looks directly at his intended partner while making friendly gestures, such as smacking smack·ing  
adj.
Brisk; vigorous; spanking: a smacking breeze.

Noun 1. smacking - the act of smacking something; a blow delivered with an open hand
slap, smack
 his lips, flattening his ears back, and narrowing his eyes.

Often, the second male maintains eye contact and smacks his lips in return. In that case, the animals get up close and personal. They often begin with a quick hug or nuzzle nuz·zle  
v. nuz·zled, nuz·zling, nuz·zles

v.tr.
1. To rub or push against gently with or as if with the nose or snout: stroked and nuzzled the kitten.

2.
. One then presents his hindquarters; the other grasps them, mounts the reversed partner, and touches his scrotum scrotum: see testis.  or gently pulls his penis. Sometimes, participants exchange active and passive roles during a single greeting.

After a completed greeting, which usually lasts no more than a few seconds, both males walk away using the stiff-legged gait characteristic of the approach.

Greetings tend to proceed in ways that reflect the animals' willingness to cooperate with one another, Watanabe says. Young adult males--each in his physical prime and able to obtain mates on his own--seldom team up, and pairs of these toughs usually fail to complete greetings. They often circle each other, jockey to position themselves as the active partner, and end up either walking away or getting into a minor scuffle.

Young adult males sometimes approach older males and almost always take the active role in the ensuing encounter. The older males, being less dominant, usually accept this arrangement but exhibit signs of wariness and worry. Younger males may seek to buddy up to senior comrades who have influential female friends within the troop, the researchers suggest.

Such a strategy seems plausible. Young adult males move from their native troops into new troops, whereas females stay put, living among close relatives. Older males typically have lived in the same troop long enough to have forged opposite-sex bonds. In her earlier work, Smuts charted strategic friendships that develop between baboons that enable the male to benefit, for example, from the female's greater access to food resources, and the female to gain protection by the male.

Greetings among pairs of older males stand out dramatically in the emotionally charged atmosphere of male baboon society. Older male partners stayed relatively relaxed during the large majority of their mutual greetings, Smuts and Watanabe say.

Two older males in particular, Alex and Boz, greeted each other much more often than any other pair did. Familiar to one another after having lived in the same troop for 7 years, they took turns at adopting active and passive roles in successive greetings. Neither made any attempts to dominate the other. Alex and Boz were the only pair of males observed defending one another in fights with other males.

Older males mated at least as often as, and in some cases more often than, socially dominant younger males, Smuts and Watanabe report. Two or more older males jointly harass a younger individual about to mate with a female and drive him off. The abandoned female usually proves willing to mate with the older male who steps in, while his cronies keep the younger male at bay.

The older males who had the most such liaisons had participated in the most completed greetings with one another, the investigators say.

Male baboon greetings resemble the human ritual performances that the late cultural anthropologist Noun 1. cultural anthropologist - an anthropologist who studies such cultural phenomena as kinship systems
social anthropologist

anthropologist - a social scientist who specializes in anthropology
 Roy Rappaport Roy A. Rappaport (1926–1997) was a distinguished anthropologist known for his contributions to the anthropological study of ritual and to ecological anthropology. Rappaport received his Ph.D. at Columbia University and then held a position at the University of Michigan.  considered essential for establishing social trust and symbolic communication Symbolic communication is exchange of messages that change a priori expectation of events. Examples of this are modern communication technology as also exchange of information amongst animals. , Watanabe contends.

As Rappaport saw it, people perform ritual acts that include a limited set of nonverbal gestures imbued with a shared meaning and then used in specific situations to signal an intention to cooperate.

Male baboons do much the same thing, Smuts and Watanabe theorize the·o·rize  
v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es

v.intr.
To formulate theories or a theory; speculate.

v.tr.
To propose a theory about.
. The creatures appear to borrow gestures from other situations to compose greetings that have a new meaning. The lip smacking, nuzzling, and embracing come from the intimacy of mother-infant relations, and the presenting of hindquarters, mounting, and genital contact derive from mating behavior.

Each partner who follows through on a greeting conveys cooperative intent while assuming that the other shares his aims, Smuts proposes. Finished greetings may even serve as promises of future aid in hijacking hijacking

Crime of seizing possession or control of a vehicle from another by force or threat of force. Although by the late 20th century hijacking most frequently involved the seizure of an airplane and its forcible diversion to destinations chosen by the air pirates, when
 mates from the young bucks, in her view.

Comparable behavior exists in human societies, the researchers note. The words testicle testicle /tes·ti·cle/ (tes´ti-k'l) testis.

tes·ti·cle
n.
A testis, especially one contained within the scrotum.



testicle

testis.
, testify, and testimony share the common Latin root testis testis (tĕs`tĭs) or testicle (tĕs`tĭkəl), one of a pair of glands that produce the male reproductive cells, or sperm. , meaning witness. This may reflect the Roman practice of a man swearing to tell the truth by touching his forefinger forefinger /fore·fin·ger/ (-fing-ger) index finger; the second finger, counting the thumb as first.

fore·fin·ger
n.
See index finger.
 to his testicles Testicles
Also called testes or gonads, they are part of the male reproductive system, and are located beneath the penis in the scrotum.

Mentioned in: Testicular Cancer, Testicular Surgery, Vasectomy
 to bring sterility upon himself if he lies, the researchers propose.

Moreover, in certain populations of Australian Aborigines Australian aborigines, native people of Australia who probably came from somewhere in Asia more than 40,000 years ago. In 2001 the population of aborigines and Torres Straits Islanders was 366,429, 1. , men visiting from neighboring communities pledge their good intentions in a ceremony during which each presents his penis to a lineup of his male hosts, each of whom briefly grasps the genitalia genitalia /gen·i·ta·lia/ (jen?i-tal´e-ah) [L.] the reproductive organs.

ambiguous genitalia
 of those men whom he trusts.

Much simpler types of ritual behavior have long been noted in a variety of animals, such as the cringing torso and downcast down·cast  
adj.
1. Directed downward: a downcast glance.

2. Low in spirits; depressed. See Synonyms at depressed.


downcast
Adjective

1.
 eyes favored by dogs trying to avert fights. If Smuts and Watanabe have found that baboons go further by inventing and passing on behavioral conventions for forming alliances, "that would be very interesting," remarks zoologist Frans B.M. de Waal of Emory University in Atlanta. "It's possible."

Richard W. Byrne, a primatologist at the University of St. Andrews in Fife, Scotland, disagrees. Male baboon greetings represent "normal communicative behaviors, not ritual," he asserts. Comparable coalition-building occurs when male and female baboons choose grooming partners, without necessarily considering one another's motives or assuming that the act implies some kind of a promise, according to Byrne.

The unanswered cries of lost youngsters may underscore baboons' inability to recognize that other animals have knowledge, thoughts, and feelings, says Rendall.

Over a 14-month span, Rendall--working with Dorothy L. Cheney and Robert M. Seyfarth, both of the University of Pennsylvania (body, education) University of Pennsylvania - The home of ENIAC and Machiavelli.

http://upenn.edu/.

Address: Philadelphia, PA, USA.
 in Philadelphia--recorded calls produced by 22 females in a baboon troop in Botswana.

Females regularly belted out barks when they became separated from the group, the researchers say. In contrast, the same baboons usually made no response to calls of others, even their own infant wailing pitifully from some unknown location.

In one experiment, mothers heard recordings of distress calls from either their own infants or unrelated infants of the same age and sex as their own. Mothers only reacted to the cries of their own infants and sometimes hurried in the direction of the calls, the researchers report in the March JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY. But the baboon moms remained silent.

"Somehow, they don't make the connection that `if I call, it will affect what my kid knows,'" Rendall contends. An internal sense of fear associated with separation from the group, rather than an appreciation of others' mental perspectives, probably causes baboons to bark in distress, he theorizes.

Alternatively, baboon mothers may not return their infants' calls because they don't want to tip off predators and adult baboon males to the presence of an isolated child. Young adult males, relatively unencumbered by opposite-sex friendships, will kill infants if given the chance so that their mothers will become sexually receptive more quickly.

Rendall doubts this explanation, however. Adult males and females in several baboon species that have been studied also let each other's calls go unanswered, he says.

Even though Byrne doesn't think that baboons consider what another animal might be thinking, he suspects that female baboons know that responses are sometimes appropriate to another's call. Female baboons indeed often bark in response to calls that they recognize as coming from a close adult relative, Byrne says.

"It seems nuts that mothers wouldn't immediately respond vocally to the distress calls of their infants," he maintains. "I don't have a good explanation for Rendall's finding."

In many species of birds and mammals, particularly those that nest or give birth in colonies, mothers and their infants exchange individually distinctive calls or sounds to find one another when they get separated, Smuts notes.

For instance, wild bottlenose dolphin mothers and their wandering infants whistle to one another, most often when they get close to each other just before reuniting. Dolphin infants do most of the whistling, probably to convey information about their identity, location, and desire to reunite, Smuts and two colleagues found in a 1993 investigation.

Communication between baboon mothers and infants, who likewise live in tightly knit groups, remains poorly understood, Smuts asserts. For that matter, she says she has only scratched the surface of male baboon greetings.

Both she and Rendall plan to continue their respective lines of research on baboon cries and greetings. As the plot thickens, stories in the naked jungle will undoubtedly add new chapters.
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Title Annotation:research on baboon behavior
Author:BOWER, BRUCE
Publication:Science News
Date:Apr 29, 2000
Words:2155
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