Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, German Primate Center, Göttingen, Germany.
Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, German Primate Center, Göttingen, Germany; Leibniz ScienceCampus Primate Cognition, Göttingen, Germany; Department for Primate Cognition, Georg-August-University Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
J Hum Evol. 2019 Jan;126:1-13. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2018.10.010. Epub 2018 Nov 21.
A remarkable and derived trait of humans is the faculty for language, and considerable research effort has been devoted to understanding the evolution of speech. In contrast to spoken language, which constitutes a (learned) symbolic communication system, the acoustic structure of nonhuman primate vocalizations is largely genetically fixed. Yet, appreciable differences between different genera and species may exist. Environmental conditions, sexual selection, and characteristics of the social system have been invoked to explain these differences. Here, we studied the acoustic variation of call types and vocal repertoires in the genus Papio. Because the genus comprises both stable groups as well as multi-level societies, and reveals striking variation in the degree of aggressiveness from south to north, it constitutes a promising model to assess the link between social system characteristics and vocal communication. We found that, the vocal repertoires of the different species were composed of the same general call types. A quantitative analysis of the acoustic features of the grunts and loud calls of chacma (Papio ursinus), olive (P. anubis), and Guinea (P. papio) baboons showed subtle acoustic differences within call types, however. Social system characteristics did not map onto acoustic variation. We found no correlation between the structure of grunts and geographic distance; the same was true for female loud calls. Only for male loud calls from three populations, call structure varied with geographic distance. Our findings corroborate the view that the structure of nonhuman primate vocalizations is highly conserved, despite the differences in social systems. Apparently, variation in rate and intensity of occurrence of signals, probably due to different behavioral dispositions in species, are sufficient to allow for plasticity at the level of the social relationships, mating patterns, and social organization.
人类的一个显著而独特的特征是语言能力,因此大量的研究致力于理解语言的进化。与构成(习得的)符号交流系统的口语不同,非人类灵长类动物的发声结构在很大程度上是由基因决定的。然而,不同属和物种之间可能存在显著差异。环境条件、性选择以及社会系统的特征被认为可以解释这些差异。在这里,我们研究了狒狒属中不同种的叫声类型和叫声组合的声学变化。因为这个属包括稳定的群体和多层次的社会群体,并且从南到北表现出攻击性程度的惊人差异,所以它构成了一个评估社会系统特征与声音交流之间联系的有前途的模型。我们发现,不同物种的叫声组合都由相同的一般叫声类型组成。对沙氏(P. ursinus)、橄榄(P. anubis)和几内亚(P. papio)狒狒的咕噜声和大声叫声的声学特征进行定量分析后发现,叫声类型内存在细微的声学差异。社会系统特征与声学变化没有关联。我们没有发现咕噜声的结构与地理距离之间存在相关性;雌性大声叫声也是如此。只有来自三个群体的雄性大声叫声的结构随地理距离而变化。我们的发现证实了这样一种观点,即尽管社会系统存在差异,非人类灵长类动物的发声结构仍然高度保守。显然,由于物种之间不同的行为倾向,信号的速率和强度的变化足以在社会关系、交配模式和社会组织的层面上产生可塑性。