When Armed With Hammers, Orangutans Can Individually Learn How To Crack Nuts
Cracking nuts is something we humans take for granted, but for hammer-wielding orangutans (a small selection, anyway) this skill is a new string to their bow in the eyes of primatologists. The use of a hammer or hammer-like object to break nuts had previously been recognized in other primate species, but now new research has found that some captive orangutans are capable of intuitively working out how to turn their hand to nut smashing without the need to be taught.
The new open access paper, published in the American Journal of Primatology, set to find out if these great apes could utilize tools provided to them when faced with a nut that needed to be cracked. They argue that nut-cracking is likely something these animals dont practice in the wild owing to the fact that an arboreal lifestyle doesnt lend itself very well to such a way of foraging. After all, its all well and good having broken the shell but not much use when the precious contents have pinged off into the abyss.
They put four orangutans at Leipzig Zoo, Germany, to the test to find out. Each animal was provided with some nuts and hammers but there was no demonstration by the keepers as to how the two could interact. One of the four in their experiment was able to start cracking nuts without tuition, demonstrating that it can emerge in these animals even when theyve not learned the behavior from other animals.
The researchers also report data from a previously unpublished study led by co-author on the new paper Martina Funk, who tested eight orangutans at Zürich Zoo using similar conditions. Here, three orangutans demonstrated an affinity for nut-cracking, meaning that out of the total twelve animals tested, at least four individuals (one-third) were able to utilize the hammers to crack nuts.
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https://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/when-armed-with-hammers-orangutans-can-individually-learn-how-to-crack-nuts/