Guisneuf Nicole, Ordoñez Juan Carlos, Benítez Marcela E, Bergman Thore J
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Capuchins at Taboga Research Project, Taboga Forest Reserve, Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
Am J Primatol. 2025 Aug;87(8):e70069. doi: 10.1002/ajp.70069.
In stark contrast to our own highly plastic communicative abilities, nonhuman primate vocalizations were historically considered fixed and innate, with very little ability to learn or modify vocal signals. However, recent studies indicate that primate vocalizations do show evidence of developmental plasticity, most notably in their context and usage. We build on these studies by investigating developmental changes in one of the most common calls of white-faced capuchins (Cebus imitator), the twitter. Specifically, we examined the behavioral context around twitter vocalizations in a wild population of white-faced capuchins in the Taboga Forest Reserve, Costa Rica. We analyzed the use of twitters in relation to behavioral state (social, foraging, travel, or resting), immediate context (approaching and leaving others), and specific social behaviors (grooming and aggression). Immatures (infants and juveniles) twitter primarily in a social state, while adults twitter primarily in a foraging state. The twitters produced by immatures were more closely associated with approaching other group members within 1 m, compared to adults. This contextual shift with development from social to foraging prompted us to also look for corresponding acoustic changes. However, the acoustic properties of twitters were not related to context or age, with the one exception that adult twitters were longer than those from immatures. Overall, our results suggest that the twitter is a call with multiple functions, with a shift in usage from social to foraging contexts across development. This adds to the growing evidence of flexibility and learning in primate vocal communication.
与我们自身高度灵活的交流能力形成鲜明对比的是,非人类灵长类动物的发声在历史上被认为是固定且先天的,几乎没有学习或改变发声信号的能力。然而,最近的研究表明,灵长类动物的发声确实显示出发育可塑性的证据,最显著的体现在其情境和用途方面。我们以这些研究为基础,调查白面卷尾猴(Cebus imitator)最常见叫声之一——啁啾声的发育变化。具体而言,我们在哥斯达黎加塔博加森林保护区的白面卷尾猴野生种群中,研究了啁啾声周围的行为情境。我们分析了啁啾声在行为状态(社交、觅食、移动或休息)、即时情境(接近和离开其他个体)以及特定社交行为(梳理毛发和攻击)方面的使用情况。幼年个体(婴儿和幼猴)主要在社交状态下发出啁啾声,而成年个体主要在觅食状态下发出啁啾声。与成年个体相比,幼年个体发出的啁啾声与在1米范围内接近其他群体成员的行为联系更为紧密。这种随着发育从社交情境到觅食情境的情境转变促使我们也去寻找相应的声学变化。然而,啁啾声的声学特性与情境或年龄无关,唯一的例外是成年个体发出的啁啾声比幼年个体的更长。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,啁啾声是一种具有多种功能的叫声,其用途在发育过程中从社交情境转变为觅食情境。这进一步证明了灵长类动物发声交流中灵活性和学习能力的不断增加。