From Reuters:
“Grunt, hoo, pant, scream:
Chimps use complex vocal communication”
(A wild female chimpanzee
produces vocalization in the Tai National Park in Ivory Coast in this undated
handout image.)
Scientists exploring the
evolutionary origin of language have detected a vocal communication system
among wild chimpanzees more complex and structured than previously known, with
a dozen call types combined into hundreds of different sequences. The
researchers made more than 4,800 recordings of vocalizations produced by
members of three groups of chimpanzees inhabiting Ivory Coast's Taï National
Park, one of the last major remnants of old-growth tropical forest in West
Africa and home to a rich array of plants and animals.
Chimpanzees, which along with
their cousins the bonobos are the closest living genetic relatives to people,
are intelligent and highly social apes that make and utilize tools and can be
taught some basic human signing from sign language. Scientists have long known
that chimpanzees use various vocalizations in the wild, but the new study
offered a comprehensive examination of this intra-species communication. "It
is not a language but it is amongst the most complex forms of communication
described in a non-human animal," said behavioral ecologist Cédric
Girard-Buttoz of French research agency CNRS's Institute for Cognitive Science
and lead author of the study published this week in the journal Communications
Biology.
The call types included a grunt,
a panted grunt, a hoo sound, a pant hoot, a bark sound, a panted bark, a pant,
a scream, a panted scream, a whimper, a panted roar and the non-vocal lip smack
and raspberry sounds. The researchers determined that these call types were
used in 390 different sequences. The order in which the chimpanzees produced
the calls appeared to follow rules and structure, though the study did not
include conclusions about any potential meanings. "The key finding is the
ability of a primate other than humans to produce several structured vocal
sequences and to recombine small sequences with two calls into longer sequences
by adding calls to it. It is important because it shows the premise of
structured communication which could have been the foundation of the evolution
towards syntax in our language," Girard-Buttoz said. Syntax refers to the
arrangement of words and phrases to construct understandable sentences. "One
of the most common sequences is the well-described 'pant hoot' sequence either
as 'hoo' plus 'pant hoot' or 'hoo' plus 'pant hoot' plus 'pant scream' or 'pant
bark.' But other sequences are also frequent like 'hoo' plus 'pant grunt' or
'grunt' plus 'pant grunt.' In general 'pant grunt' and 'pant hoot' are the most
common calls used in these sequences," Girard-Buttoz said.
The researchers want to learn
whether the various sequences communicate a wider range of meanings in the
complex social environment of the chimpanzees. They have suspicions about the
potential meanings of certain vocalizations. "We need to explore in detail
the contexts of emission of these vocalizations to see if it shifts between
single calls and sequences," Girard-Buttoz said. "Then we need to
conduct playback experiments to see if the suspected meaning matches with the
behavioral reaction of chimpanzees when they hear the call."
The researchers are not certain
whether chimpanzee vocal communication may be similar to the beginnings of
language in the human evolutionary lineage. Humans and chimpanzees share a
common ancestor but split into separate lineages perhaps 7 million years ago. "Protolanguage
was probably in between what chimpanzees do and what humans do,"
Girard-Buttoz said.
^ This is interesting. I think
they are much more intelligent than we currently know or understand. ^
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