Interspecies semantic communication in two forest primates
Date issued
2000
In
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, The Royal Society of London
Vol
267
No
1444
From page
713
To page
718
Subjects
alarm call anti-predator behaviour non-human primate semantic communication mixed species
Abstract
West African Diana monkeys (<i>Cercopithecus diana</i>) and Campbell's monkeys (<i>Cercopithecus campbelli</i>) frequently form mixed-species associations. Males of both species produce acoustically distinct alarm calls to crowned eagles (<i>Stephanoaetus coronalus</i>) and leopards (<i>Panthera pardus</i>), two of their main predators. Field playback experiments were conducted to investigate whether Diana monkeys respond to Campbell's alarm calls and whether they understand the calls' semantic content. Diana monkeys responded to playback of Campbell's leopard or eagle alarm calls as though the original predator were present. In a second experiment, Diana monkeys were primed with either Campbell's eagle or leopard alarm calls and then subsequently probed with the vocalizations of a crowned eagle or a leopard. Results showed that monkeys used the semantic information conveyed by the Campbell's alarm calls to predict the presence of a predator. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that non-human primates are able to use acoustic signals of diverse origin as labels for underlying mental representations.
Publication type
journal article
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