Anthropological Institute and Museum, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 11;8(9):e74896. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074896. eCollection 2013.
The ability to plan for the future beyond immediate needs would be adaptive to many animal species, but is widely thought to be uniquely human. Although studies in captivity have shown that great apes are capable of planning for future needs, it is unknown whether and how they use this ability in the wild. Flanged male Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii) emit long calls, which females use to maintain earshot associations with them. We tested whether long calls serve to communicate a male's ever-changing predominant travel direction to facilitate maintaining these associations. We found that the direction in which a flanged male emits his long calls predicts his subsequent travel direction for many hours, and that a new call indicates a change in his main travel direction. Long calls given at or near the night nest indicate travel direction better than random until late afternoon on the next day. These results show that male orangutans make their travel plans well in advance and announce them to conspecifics. We suggest that such a planning ability is likely to be adaptive for great apes, as well as in other taxa.
规划未来超越即时需求的能力对许多动物物种来说是适应性的,但普遍认为这是人类独有的。尽管圈养研究表明,大猿类能够为未来的需求做计划,但尚不清楚它们是否以及如何在野外使用这种能力。有獠牙的苏门答腊雄性猩猩(Pongo abelii)会发出长叫声,雌性猩猩用这些长叫声来保持与它们的听觉联系。我们测试了长叫声是否用于传达雄性不断变化的主要行进方向,以方便维持这些联系。我们发现,有獠牙的雄性发出长叫声的方向可以预测他随后数小时的行进方向,而且新的叫声表明他的主要行进方向发生了变化。在夜间巢穴发出的或附近发出的长叫声在第二天下午晚些时候之前,比随机的预测效果更好。这些结果表明,雄性猩猩会提前做好旅行计划,并向同类宣布。我们认为,这种规划能力可能对大型猿类以及其他类群都是适应性的。