Station Biologique, Laboratoire d'Éthologie Animale et Humaine EthoS - UMR 6552, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université de Rennes 1 Paimpont, France ; Primate Research Institute (Cognition and Learning section), Kyoto University Inuyama, Japan.
Front Psychol. 2013 Jul 9;4:390. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00390. eCollection 2013.
Social factors play a key role in the structuring of vocal repertoires at the individual level, notably in non-human primates. Some authors suggested that, at the species level too, social life may have driven the evolution of communicative complexity, but this has rarely been empirically tested. Here, we use a comparative approach to address this issue. We investigated vocal variability, at both the call type and the repertoire levels, in three forest-dwelling species of Cercopithecinae presenting striking differences in their social systems, in terms of social organization as well as social structure. We collected female call recordings from twelve De Brazza's monkeys (Cercopithecus neglectus), six Campbell's monkeys (Cercopithecus campbelli) and seven red-capped mangabeys (Cercocebus torquatus) housed in similar conditions. First, we noted that the level of acoustic variability and individual distinctiveness found in several call types was related to their importance in social functioning. Contact calls, essential to intra-group cohesion, were the most individually distinctive regardless of the species, while threat calls were more structurally variable in mangabeys, the most "despotic" of our three species. Second, we found a parallel between the degree of complexity of the species' social structure and the size, diversity, and usage of its vocal repertoire. Mangabeys (most complex social structure) called twice as often as guenons and displayed the largest and most complex repertoire. De Brazza's monkeys (simplest social structure) displayed the smallest and simplest repertoire. Campbell's monkeys displayed an intermediate pattern. Providing evidence of higher levels of vocal variability in species presenting a more complex social system, our results are in line with the theory of a social-vocal coevolution of communicative abilities, opening new perspectives for comparative research on the evolution of communication systems in different animal taxa.
社会因素在个体水平上的声音曲目结构中起着关键作用,尤其是在非人类灵长类动物中。一些作者认为,在物种水平上,社会生活也可能推动了交际复杂性的进化,但这很少被经验性地检验。在这里,我们使用比较的方法来解决这个问题。我们调查了三个森林栖息的长尾猴科物种的叫声可变性,包括叫声类型和曲目水平,这些物种在社会系统方面表现出显著的差异,包括社会组织和社会结构。我们从 12 只黑冠猴(Cercopithecus neglectus)、6 只坎贝尔氏长尾猴(Cercopithecus campbelli)和 7 只红帽卷尾猴(Cercocebus torquatus)中收集了雌性叫声录音,这些动物被安置在相似的环境中。首先,我们注意到,几种叫声类型的声学可变性和个体独特性的水平与它们在社会功能中的重要性有关。联系叫声对于群体内的凝聚力至关重要,无论物种如何,它们都是最具个体独特性的叫声,而威胁叫声在卷尾猴中则更具结构变异性,卷尾猴是我们三种物种中最“专制”的。其次,我们发现,物种社会结构的复杂程度与声音曲目的大小、多样性和使用方式之间存在平行关系。卷尾猴(最复杂的社会结构)的叫声频率是长尾猴的两倍,而且表现出最大和最复杂的曲目。黑冠猴(最简单的社会结构)表现出最小和最简单的曲目。坎贝尔氏长尾猴表现出中间模式。我们的结果提供了物种之间更高水平的声音可变性的证据,表明在更复杂的社会系统中存在着社会-声音协同进化的沟通能力,为不同动物类群的沟通系统进化的比较研究开辟了新的前景。