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1. Lessons from vervets and macaques MSc ACSB module 2006/07
AC Session 3
2. Vervet monkey alarm calls Cheney & Seyfarth: "How monkeys see the world“ Vervet monkeys (tree + ground living monkey, Africa)
Predators = Leopard, Monkey-eating Eagle, Python, + baboons, etc, and 3 calls
Eagle gets a Cough,
Snake gets a Chutter
Leopard gets a Bark
3. Vervet alarm-call responses Behave appropriately when they hear one of these calls (run down from treetops / walk carefully / run up into trees)
Do they know what messages the calls carry? (e.g “There is an Eagle, / a Snake, / a Leopard”)
Film response to plausible taped call; no real caller whose behaviour might give hearers a clue to the right response
3 responses are given in appropriate contexts using just the information in the call itself, showing the monkeys are responding to the acoustic signals, not just to caller’s concurrent behaviour
4. Vervet calls on www http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/~mnkylab/media/vervetcalls.html
5. Vervet alarm calls provide information…
… about environment, not about signaller’s motivational state (e.g. different levels of fear) – equivalent of words for the 3 predators?
Nearer to language than the displays considered last time – is call-use learned c.f. word-use?
Are monkey vocalisations acquired/learned?
Not in squirrel monkey - innate.
Perhaps in X-fostered Japanese & rhesus macaque food-coos
Learning probably contributes in vervets
6. Ontogeny of vervet predator calls Vervet infants give alarms to appropriate class of stimuli, but too wide a spread of targets within each class
“Leopard” to many large ground animals
“Eagle” to birds of all sorts
“Snake” to sticks and other long thin objects
As grow up, they focus alarms down on the real predators, the class-members that spell danger
7. Vervet call development (2)
8. Vervet call development (3)
9. Vervet call development (4) Narrowing down of call-triggers may depend on response from adults: take up and repeat alarm to real hazards, ignore it to a harmless stimulus
Responses to alarm calls not fully adult
Initially respond after looking at an adult which has started to respond
More often show adult-like response when near mother than when mother has wandered away
Vervets use wrrr-call to indicate threat from another group; experience shapes its correct use over 1st two years of life (earlier if more frequently in contact with other groups)
10. Involuntary or voluntary? High ranking vervets call more often, and are more often the first to call; but don’t scan for predators more often. So subordinates must also scan and detect predators, but omit call
Females call more readily if kin present
Captive males call more when female companion(s) than when companion is male
Never call “eagle” when should say “leopard”
11. Is this alarm call system unique? Calls provide info about dangers, not level of fear
Vervet monkey grunts (Cheney & Seyfarth)
Can't be distinguished by ear by humans
4 types: Dom>Sub, Sub>Dom, Move Into Open, see Another Group
Difference in response to taped grunts indicates monkeys can separate them, appropriate information conveyed, e.g.
MIO : listener looks towards loudspeaker
AG: looks away towards where loudspeaker points
12. Vervet grunts
13. Rhesus macaque screams Rhesus & pigtail macaque screams studied by Gouzoules
Rhesus has 5 types of scream – code for
Rank of the opponent
Whether a relative (safer) or non-kin (risky)
Whether or not any physical contact
Pigtail has 4 types of scream
14. Rhesus screams (2) High rank, contact
Low rank, no contact
Relative, or
High rank, no contact
Relative
High rank, no contact
15. Interim conclusions In Vervet alarm call system, information is encoded in specific calls; coding is partly pre-wired but is refined by experience
Several other call systems which communicate environmental information
Kitui used the leopard call (sans leopard) to halt a fight that his troop were losing – but then walked across ground repeating the call, which made it plain to humans that there was no real danger
16. What information is in a call? Do primates lump-together different calls that refer to the same thing?
Habituation
Do primates learn to ignore specific calls, or to distrust a mental state (eg fear) in the caller?
Are changes in risk tied to a particular threat?
Do callers aim to inform, or to trigger a specific response?
17. Rhesus food calls 4 food calls
Warble, Harmonic Arch (Good food)
Coos, Grunts (low-quality food)
S1 and S2 initially elicit orientation
Habituate S1, then test S2, where S2 may be a different signal for same quality of food, or a different signal for different-quality food
18. Hauser’s results Hauser, 1998, Anim Behav 55, 1647-1658
Habituate response to one HQ food call:
Eliminates response to other HQ call
Leaves intact response to LQ calls
Habituate response to one LQ food call:
Leaves intact responses to HQ food calls
19. Cheney & Seyfarth - Vervet Inter-group calls:
Wrr (low arousal – just spotted) & Chutter (high arousal – scrap going on or likely)
Habituation paradigm:
Test Chutter; habituate Wrr (same #); re-test Chutter
Decreased response if all 3 stimuli for same hazard, from same #, not if different monkeys’ calls used
Implications:
know that A and B represent the same threat, conclude that this # has become unreliable about other groups
No decrement if calls represent different threats
20. Superb staring alarms Aerial and ground predator alarms
Test starling alarms: habituate vervet eagle alarm; test starling alarms again
Decreased response to starling eagle alarm
No decrement for starling ground predator call
Have learned to be sceptical about (any) warnings about aerial predators, not just habituated to vervet coughs specifically
21. What does caller aim to achieve? In Cameroon, vervets attacked by feral dogs
Dogs trigger ‘leopard’ alarm, troop runs into trees
Elsewhere, hunted by men with dogs + guns
Leopard alarm would attract attention and a shot
So dogs trigger a quiet call that allows troop to flee silently
Monkey link signals to the action that the signal needs to achieve
22. Limits on understanding Kitui used a leopard-call to stop a fight (deception?), but then walked across ground showing that there was probably no leopard – none of the hearers noticed the incongruity
Vervets also can’t recognise other indirect cues to danger – e.g., snake track on ground, or antelope carcass stored in tree (which signals that a leopard is nearby)
23. References – session 6 Cheney & Seyfarth (1992) Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 15, 135-147 (commentary 147-182)
Cheney & Seyfarth (1990) How monkeys see the world, Ch. 3-6.
Seyfarth & Cheney (2003) Meaning and emotion in animal vocalizations. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1000, 32-55.
Hauser (1997) The evolution of communication. Ch. 5, 7