Chimpanzees' behavioral flexibility, social tolerance, and use of tool-composites in a progressively challenging foraging problem

Publication date

2021-02-19

Authors

Harrison, Rachel A.
van Leeuwen, Edwin J.C.ORCID 0000-0002-7729-2182ISNI 0000000452650347
Whiten, Andrew

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Behavioral flexibility is a critical ability allowing animals to respond to changes in their environment. Previous studies have found evidence of inflexibility when captive chimpanzees are faced with changing task parameters. We provided two groups of sanctuary-housed chimpanzees with a foraging task in which solutions were restricted over time. Initially, juice could be retrieved from within a tube by hand or by using tool materials, but effective solutions were then restricted by narrowing the tube, necessitating the abandonment of previous solutions and adoption of new ones. Chimpanzees responded flexibly, but one group increased their use of effective techniques to a greater extent than the other. Tool-composite techniques emerged in both groups, but primarily in the more flexible group. The more flexible group also showed higher rates of socio-positive behaviors at the task. In conjunction, these findings support the hypothesis that social tolerance may facilitate the emergence and spread of novel behaviors.

Keywords

Animals, Biological Sciences, Ethology, General

Citation

Harrison, R A, van Leeuwen, E J C & Whiten, A 2021, 'Chimpanzees' behavioral flexibility, social tolerance, and use of tool-composites in a progressively challenging foraging problem', iScience, vol. 24, no. 2, 102033, pp. 1-52. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2021.102033