Researchers
have discovered that one population of white-faced capuchin monkeys in Panama
have entered the Stone Age. The monkeys have started using stone tools to break
nuts and shellfish, making them the fourth type of primates to do so after us.
As reported
in New Scientist, the group inhabits Jicarón island, a small island off the
coast of Panama and part of the Coiba National Park. Three islands make up the
national park, with capuchin monkeys on all three of them. However, only the
monkeys on Jicarón have started using tools – and not all the capuchins at
that. Only the males in a particular region of the island use them. A paper
with the findings is currently available on BioArXiv.
“We were surprised that this behaviour appears to be geographically localised,” lead author Brendan Barrett at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology told NewScientist.
The first
report of this behavior in the park's monkeys dates back to 2004, when
co-author Alicia Ibáñez noticed the monkeys using stone tools. Researchers went
back in March 2017 and placed camera traps across the three islands to catch
the monkeys in the act.
The team
witnessed the male monkeys break coconuts, crabs, and snails. However, it is
unclear why this behavior is not more spread out to other groups on the island.
The researchers note that individual monkeys move between groups, so in theory
the innovation should spread.
The team suggest
that it is possible that entering the Stone Age has a chance component to it,
rather than being an expected trajectory for primates. Perhaps, for example, a
smarter-than-average individual began using the tools and the others copied
him. Given limited food options, tools can increase their chance of survival.
The team
hope that more research and further observations of these monkeys will help
explain what is going on.
The
white-faced capuchins are the second American species to enter the Stone Age.
Another group of capuchins, found in South America, use stone tools and may
have done so for 700 years. The other two species are macaques in Thailand and
chimpanzees in West Africa.
[H/T: NewScientist]
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