Tool use behavior in three wild bonobo communities at Kokolopori.

Am J Primatol

Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.

Published: January 2022


Article Synopsis

  • Comparative studies on primate tool technologies provide insights into the evolution of tool use among hominins, particularly focusing on the bonobo, which has been less studied compared to chimpanzees.
  • The Kokolopori bonobos displayed a range of eight tool behaviors, especially the use of leaf-umbrellas during rain, with findings indicating this behavior is common among adult females and appears to be habitual.
  • This research suggests that current theories on tool use, which often emphasize foraging, need to be broadened to include nonforaging contexts to better understand the evolution of tool technology in humans.

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Article Abstract

Comparative studies on tool technologies in extant primates, especially in our closest living relatives, offer a window into the evolutionary foundations of tool use in hominins. Whereas chimpanzee tool technology is well studied across populations, the scarcity of described tool technology in wild populations of our other closest living relative, the bonobo, is a mystery. Here we provide a first report of the tool use repertoire of the Kokolopori bonobos and describe in detail the use of leaf-umbrellas during rainfall, with the aim to improve our knowledge of bonobo tool use capacity in the wild. The tool use repertoire of the Kokolopori bonobos was most similar to that of the nearby population of Wamba and comprised eight behaviors, none in a foraging context. Further, over a 6-month period we documented 44 instances of leaf-umbrella use by 22 individuals from three communities, suggesting that this behavior is habitual. Most leaf-umbrella tool users were adult females, and we observed a nonadult using a leaf-umbrella on only a single occasion. While the study and theory of tool technologies is often based on the use of tools in foraging tasks, tool use in bonobos typically occurs in nonforaging contexts across populations. Therefore, incorporating both foraging and nonforaging contexts into our theoretical framework is essential if we wish to advance our understanding of the evolutionary trajectories of tool technology in humans.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajp.23342DOI Listing

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