The alarm call system of two species of black-and-white colobus monkeys (<em>Colobus polykomos</em> and<em> Colobus guereza</em>)
Author(s)
Date issued
2009
In
Journal of Comparative Psychology, American Psychological Association
Vol
123
No
2
From page
136
To page
150
Subjects
<i>Colobus polykomos</i> <i>Colobus guereza</i> alarm calls predation referential signaling
Abstract
Vervet monkey alarm calling has long been the paradigmatic example of how primates use vocalizations in response to predators. In vervets, there is a close and direct relationship between the production of distinct alarm vocalizations and the presence of distinct predator types. Recent fieldwork has however revealed the use of several additional alarm calling systems in primates. Here, the authors describe playback studies on the alarm call system of two colobine species, the King colobus (<i>Colobus polykomos</i>) of Taï Forest, Ivory Coast, and the Guereza colobus (<i>C. guereza</i>) of Budongo Forest, Uganda. Both species produce two basic alarm call types, snorts and acoustically variable roaring phrases, when confronted with leopards or crowned eagles. Neither call type is given exclusively to one predator, but the authors found strong regularities in call sequencing. Leopards typically elicited sequences consisting of a snort followed by few phrases, while eagles typically elicited sequences with no snorts and many phrases. The authors discuss how these call sequences have the potential to encode information at different levels, such as predator type, response-urgency, or the caller’s imminent behavior.
Publication type
journal article
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
Name
Schel_AM.-The_Alarm_Call_20170203165417-WW.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
1.03 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):a6680b18d831fa70fc0cd961b66912ff
