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Behavioral and functional strategies during tool use tasks in bonobos
Authors:Ameline Bardo  Antony Borel  Hélène Meunier  Jean‐Pascal Guéry  Emmanuelle Pouydebat
Institution:1. Paris Descartes University, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France;2. Department of Ecology and Management of Biodiversity, UMR 7179–CNRS/MNHN, MECADEV, Paris, France;3. Department of Prehistory, UMR 7194‐CNRS–MNHN, Musée de l'Homme, Paris, France;4. Primatology Center of Strasbourg University, Fort Foch, Niederhausbergen, France;5. Laboratory of Cognitive and Adaptative Neuroscience, UMR 7364‐CNRS/, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France;6. La Vallée des Singes, Romagne, France
Abstract:Different primate species have developed extensive capacities for grasping and manipulating objects. However, the manual abilities of primates remain poorly known from a dynamic point of view. The aim of the present study was to quantify the functional and behavioral strategies used by captive bonobos (Pan paniscus) during tool use tasks. The study was conducted on eight captive bonobos which we observed during two tool use tasks: food extraction from a large piece of wood and food recovery from a maze. We focused on grasping postures, in‐hand movements, the sequences of grasp postures used that have not been studied in bonobos, and the kind of tools selected. Bonobos used a great variety of grasping postures during both tool use tasks. They were capable of in‐hand movement, demonstrated complex sequences of contacts, and showed more dynamic manipulation during the maze task than during the extraction task. They arrived on the location of the task with the tool already modified and used different kinds of tools according to the task. We also observed individual manual strategies. Bonobos were thus able to develop in‐hand movements similar to humans and chimpanzees, demonstrated dynamic manipulation, and they responded to task constraints by selecting and modifying tools appropriately, usually before they started the tasks. These results show the necessity to quantify object manipulation in different species to better understand their real manual specificities, which is essential to reconstruct the evolution of primate manual abilities.
Keywords:grasping postures  in‐hand movements  Pan paniscus  tool choice  tool manipulation
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