Lonsdorf Elizabeth V, Hopkins William D
Department of Conservation and Science, Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, IL 60614, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Aug 30;102(35):12634-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0505806102. Epub 2005 Aug 16.
Whether nonhuman primates exhibit population-level handedness remains a topic of considerable theoretical and empirical debate. One continued subject of discussion is whether evidence of population-level handedness in primates is confined to studies in captive animals or whether it is in both captive and wild subjects. Here, we report evidence of population-level handedness in wild chimpanzees for a tool-use task known as "termite-fishing." We subsequently compared the handedness for termite-fishing with other published reports on handedness for nut-cracking and wadge-dipping and found task-specific differences in handedness. Last, when combing all of the published data on tool use in wild chimpanzees, we show that hand preferences are heritable. Contrary to previous claims, our results demonstrate that population-level handedness is evident in wild chimpanzees and suggest that the antecedents of lateralization of function associated with hand use were present at least 5 million years ago, before the Pan-Homo split.
非人类灵长类动物是否表现出群体水平的用手偏好仍然是一个存在大量理论和实证争议的话题。一个持续讨论的主题是,灵长类动物群体水平用手偏好的证据是否仅限于对圈养动物的研究,还是在圈养和野生个体中都存在。在此,我们报告了野生黑猩猩在一项名为“钓白蚁”的工具使用任务中表现出群体水平用手偏好的证据。随后,我们将钓白蚁的用手偏好与其他已发表的关于砸坚果和蘸取食物的用手偏好报告进行了比较,发现不同任务的用手偏好存在差异。最后,在梳理所有已发表的关于野生黑猩猩工具使用的数据时,我们表明用手偏好是可遗传的。与之前的说法相反,我们的结果表明野生黑猩猩存在群体水平的用手偏好,并表明与手部使用相关的功能侧化的前身至少在500万年前就已出现,早于黑猩猩和人类的分化。