Department for the Ecology of Animal Societies, Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, Konstanz, Germany.
Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany.
Am J Primatol. 2024 Apr;86(4):e23594. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23594. Epub 2024 Jan 9.
Tool-using primates often show sex differences in both the frequency and efficiency of tool use. In species with sex-biased dispersal, such within-group variation likely shapes patterns of cultural transmission of tool-use traditions between groups. On the Panamanian islands of Jicarón and Coiba, a population of white-faced capuchins (Cebus capucinus imitator)-some of which engage in habitual stone tool use-provide an opportunity to test hypotheses about why such sex-biases arise. On Jicarón, we have only observed males engaging in stone tool use, whereas on Coiba, both sexes are known to use tools. Using 5 years of camera trap data, we provide evidence that this variation likely reflects a sex difference in tool use rather than a sampling artifact, and then test hypotheses about the factors driving this pattern. Differences in physical ability or risk-aversion, and competition over access to anvils do not account for the sex-differences in tool-use we observe. Our data show that adult females are physically capable of stone tool use: adult females on Coiba and juveniles on Jicarón smaller than adult females regularly engage in tool use. Females also have ample opportunity to use tools: the sexes are equally terrestrial, and competition over anvils is low. Finally, females rarely scrounge on left-over food items either during or after tool-using events, suggesting they are not being provisioned by males. Although it remains unclear why adult white-faced capuchin females on Jicarón do not use stone-tools, our results illustrate that such sex biases in socially learned behaviors can arise even in the absence of obvious physical, environmental, and social constraints. This suggests that a much more nuanced understanding of the differences in social structure, diet, and dispersal patterns are needed to explain why sex-biases in tool use arise in some populations but not in others.
使用工具的灵长类动物在使用工具的频率和效率上通常存在性别差异。在具有性别偏向性扩散的物种中,这种群体内的变异可能会影响工具使用传统在群体之间的文化传播模式。在巴拿马的 Jicarón 和 Coiba 岛上,一群白面卷尾猴(Cebus capucinus imitator)——其中一些会习惯性地使用石器——为测试关于为什么会出现这种性别偏见的假设提供了机会。在 Jicarón,我们只观察到雄性使用石器,而在 Coiba,两性都知道使用工具。利用 5 年的相机陷阱数据,我们提供了证据表明,这种变异很可能反映了工具使用中的性别差异,而不是抽样偏差,然后测试了驱动这种模式的因素的假设。身体能力或避险差异,以及对砧石的竞争并不能解释我们观察到的工具使用中的性别差异。我们的数据表明,成年雌性具有使用石器的身体能力:Coiba 的成年雌性和 Jicarón 的未成年雌性比成年雌性小,经常使用工具。雌性也有足够的机会使用工具:两性都是陆生的,对砧石的竞争很低。最后,雌性很少在使用工具后或使用工具时在剩余食物上觅食,这表明它们没有得到雄性的喂养。尽管目前尚不清楚为什么 Jicarón 的成年白面卷尾猴雌性不使用石器,但我们的结果表明,即使在没有明显的身体、环境和社会限制的情况下,这种社会性习得行为中的性别偏见也可能出现。这表明,需要更细致地了解社会结构、饮食和扩散模式的差异,以解释为什么在一些群体中会出现性别偏见,而在其他群体中则不会出现。