4.2 Article

Spontaneous tool use by wild Capuchin monkeys (Cebus libidinosus) in the cerrado

Journal

FOLIA PRIMATOLOGICA
Volume 77, Issue 5, Pages 337-344

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000093698

Keywords

tool use; nut cracking; stone pounding; Capuchin; Cebus libidinosus; Cerrado,Brasilia National Park

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Among primates, only chimpanzees and orang-utans are credited with customary tool use in nature. Among monkeys, capuchins stand out with respect to the number of accounts of tool use. However, the majority of capuchin tool use observations reported in nature is anecdotal or idiosyncratic. In this report, we documented the stone pounding of dry fruits (Hymenea courbaril and Acrocomia aculeata) in two wild free-ranging groups of Cebus libidinosus in the Brasilia National Park, a preserved area representative of the Cerrado biome of Central Brazil. In 2004, we noted 2 episodes at which 4 monkeys used stones to crack open nuts. In 2005, we recorded 5 pounding episodes involving 2 different monkeys. Observations of tool use over the course of 2 consecutive years by some individuals, as well as other indirect evidence, indicate that this behaviour could be habitual in the studied groups. We propose that the probability of the emergence of the use of pounding stones as tools may be dependent on the ecological variables that influence the degree of terrestriality and extractive foraging and the complex interaction of these factors.

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