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Tool-Wielding
Chimps Provide A Glimpse Of Early Human Behavior
Monday, November 12, 2007
Pictured
are sticks used as tools by savanna chimpanzees to excavate
underground food resources. Tool-wielding savanna chimps of
western Tanzania used these sticks to crack a tough layer of
soil to excavate the underground storage organs - tubers,
roots and bulbs - of plants as a food resource. The behavior
by chimps to excavate underground food resources with tools
has never been documented before, according to University of
Wisconsin-Madison anthropologist Travis Pickering, and may
resemble behaviors of the earliest hominids as they migrated
from the forest to the African savanna five million years
ago.
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Credit:
Jim Moore, University of California at San Diego
Chimpanzees inhabiting a
harsh savanna environment and using bark and stick tools to
exploit an underground food resource are giving scientists new
insights to the behaviors of the earliest hominids who, millions
of years ago, left the African forests to range the same kinds of
environments and possibly utilize the same foods.
Writing today (Nov. 12) in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a team of
researchers including University of Wisconsin-Madison
anthropologist Travis R. Pickering reports evidence of tool use
among rare savanna chimps to harvest edible tubers, roots and
bulbs.
The finding is important
because it chips away at behaviors once seen as uniquely human.
It supports the notion that chimpanzees, our closest living
evolutionary relatives, can serve as models for understanding
some aspects of the lifestyles and behaviors of the earliest
members of the human family.
The new study demonstrates that
"the understanding and capability to exploit these resources
were very likely within the grasp of the first chimp-like
hominids," argues Pickering. "It was widely believed
that it is a uniquely human adaptation to use tools to dig these
things up."
R. Adriana Hernandez-Aguilar of
the University of Southern California collected field data as
part of her dissertation over nearly two years in the Ugalla
Forest Reserve of western Tanzania, an arid woodland savanna that
is home to a small population of chimpanzees that have adapted to
life beyond the apes' typical forest habitat. Research at the
site has been coordinated by the study's other co-author, Jim
Moore of the University of California at San Diego, since 1989
under the aegis of the Ugalla Primate Project.
"Chimpanzees are not
australopithecines, and we can't conclude that if they do
something today, our ancestors must have done it then. But, when
integrated with research on the fossil and paleoecological
record, modern analogies are useful for investigating our past,"
Moore explains. "In this case, the Ugalla chimpanzees
suggest that underground resources were within reach of our
ancestors with similar brain size and hand morphology."
A surprise finding, Moore,
Pickering and Hernandez-Aguilar explain, was that the chimps
feasted on underground food resources during the food-rich rainy
season, and not as a fallback in times of scarcity. That
observation, says Moore, "challenges our current hypotheses
about the role of such foods in hominid evolution and may help
reframe the scientific debate."
Chimps at Ugalla, the authors
explain, are facing environmental challenges similar to those of
our human ancestors 5 million or so years ago when shifting
climate greatly reduced the forests favored by early hominids.
For chimpanzees today, and
likely for our human ancestors, open woodlands such as the Ugalla
Forest Reserve are marginal habitats where the ability to adapt
is challenged. But woodland savannas are also rich in the types
of plants that store nutrients in what scientists call
underground storage organs - tubers, roots and bulbs of various
types. It has been hypothesized that early hominids' access to
such resources through the use of tools was a critical innovation
that helped power human adaptation to savanna environments.
"Until now, it has been
believed that such food resources, buried beneath the surface of
the soil, were beyond the reach of modern chimpanzees,"
according to Moore.
The underground storage organs
of plants in Ugalla can be difficult to get at, as the tubers and
roots can be obtained only by cracking a tough layer of earth. To
do so, the chimps apparently use sticks, pieces of logs and
sturdy bark to penetrate a hard crust of soil to reach looser
layers of dirt in which the tubers are found.
While researchers were unable
to directly observe the savanna chimps in the act of using tools
to dig up the tubers, evidence of such activity by the chimps was
found at 11 different sites in Ugalla. Ten of the sites were
directly beneath chimpanzee nests. The spoor of chimps - but no
other animals - including knuckle prints, feces and chewed wads
of the fibrous tubers, provided evidence that the apes were
taking advantage of the underground food resource.
Three of the sites, according
to the new PNAS report, yielded seven sediment-encrusted digging
tools. The worn edges and patterns of adhering sediment of the
sticks and bark recovered from the sites implied their use as
implements for reaching the tubers.
Some of the underground storage
organs excavated by the Ugalla chimps are fibrous and have the
appearance of uncooked potatoes, according to Pickering. The
chimps chew them like gum to extract nutrients and spit out
indigestible wads of fiber. Some of the plants used by the
chimps, notes Hernandez-Aguilar, are used as food or medicines by
humans.
"Chimpanzees in many parts
of Africa are known to consume leaves of several species for
medicinal purposes and it will be interesting if it is confirmed
in the future that chimps in Ugalla consume underground storage
organs for their medicinal properties," says
Hernandez-Aguilar.
In Ugalla, chimpanzee density
is low, but recent survey data suggest the vast majority of
Tanzania's chimps live in such woodlands. The Ugalla woodland
savanna may parallel environments of 5 million years ago when
early hominids, the forebearers of the modern human lineage,
adapted to the savanna as major climate change dramatically
reduced the continent's forests.
"Savanna chimps, we would
contend, are dealing with environmental constraints and problems
- evolutionary pressures - that our earliest relatives would have
dealt with as well in similar environments," Pickering
explains.
And because the tools are
organic in nature and subject to rapid decay, evidence of such
tool use by early hominids is unlikely to be found in the
archaeological record.
In the case of the human
lineage, the move to a new environment, scientists believe,
triggered the development of anatomical features such as big jaws
and powerful grinding teeth to cope with a shift in diet to foods
like the underground storage organs of plants.
The new work showing
tool-assisted digging by the Ugalla chimps - as well as others'
recent work with another population of savanna chimps who use
sticks as small spears to impale bush babies - makes these types
of chimps unique and argues for the importance of conserving and
studying them further.
"The insights that they
may continue to provide concerning human evolution might prove to
be quite significant," Pickering argues.
The study was funded by the LSB
Leakey Foundation, the National Science Foundation, the Jane
Goodall Center at the University of Southern California, the
University of California Committee on Research, and the
Palaeontology Scientific Trust.
Source:
University of Wisconsin, Madison

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