понедельник, 29 декабря 2014 г.

Monkey Gives First Aid To Friend Shocked By Wires

Onlookers at a train station in northern India watched in awe as a monkey came to the rescue of an injured friend — resuscitating another monkey that had been shocked and knocked unconscious.


The injured monkey had fallen between the tracks, apparently after touching high-tension wires at the train station in the north Indian city of Kanpur.


His companion came to the rescue and was captured on camera lifting the friend’s motionless body, shaking it, dipping it into a mud puddle and biting its head and skin — working until the hurt monkey regained consciousness.


The first monkey, completely covered in mud, opened its eyes and began moving again.


Crowds of travelers watched the Sunday scene in amazement, filming and snapping pictures.


Full story here .

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How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

пятница, 26 декабря 2014 г.

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

вторник, 23 декабря 2014 г.

In Argentina, a Court Grants Sandra the Orangutan Basic Rights


The ape has spent the last 20 years in a zoo


An orangutan named Sandra has been granted certain legal rights by a court in Argentina.


Lawyers for Argentina’s Association of Professional Lawyers for Animal Rights (Afada) argued that Sandra was a “non-human person” and was being detained illegally in Buenos Aires’ zoo, the BBC reports.


The case rested on whether the court decided the orangutan was a “person” or a “thing” and after judges rejected the writ several times, they finally ruled the ape had rights that needed protecting.


In a similar case earlier this month, a New York court decided that a chimpanzee did not have legal personhood and therefore was not entitled to human rights.


If Sandra’s case isn’t appealed, the orangutan will live out her days enjoying greater freedom in a sanctuary in Brazil.


Full story here .

—————————————–


How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

суббота, 20 декабря 2014 г.

No ‘bird brains’? Crows exhibit advanced relational thinking, study suggests

Crows have long been heralded for their high intelligence — they can remember faces, use tools and communicate in sophisticated ways.



But a newly published study finds crows also have the brain power to solve higher-order, relational-matching tasks, and they can do so spontaneously. That means crows join humans, apes and monkeys in exhibiting advanced relational thinking, according to the research.


Russian researcher Anna Smirnova studies a crow making the correct selection during a relational matching trial.


“What the crows have done is a phenomenal feat,” says Ed Wasserman, a psychology professor at the University of Iowa and corresponding author of the study. “That’s the marvel of the results. It’s been done before with apes and monkeys, but now we’re dealing with a bird; but not just any bird, a bird with a brain as special to birds as the brain of an apes is special to mammals.”


“Crows Spontaneously Exhibit Analogical Reasoning,” which was published December 18 in Current Biology, was written by Wasserman and Anna Smirnova, Zoya Zorina and Tanya Obozova, researchers with the Department of Biology at Lomonosov Moscow State University in Moscow, Russia, where the study was conducted.


Wasserman said the Russian researchers have studied bird species for decades and that a main theme of their work is cognition. He credits his counterparts with a thoughtful and well-planned study.


“This was a very artful experiment,” Wasserman says. “I was just bowled over by how innovative it was.”


The study involved two hooded crows that were at least 2 years old. First, the birds were trained and tested to identify items by color, shape and number of single samples.


Here is how it worked: the birds were placed into a wire mesh cage into which a plastic tray containing three small cups was occasionally inserted. The sample cup in the middle was covered with a small card on which was pictured a color, shape or number of items. The other two cups were also covered with cards — one that matched the sample and one that did not. During this initial training period, the cup with the matching card contained two mealworms; the crows were rewarded with these food items when they chose the matching card, but they received no food when they chose the other card.


Once the crows has been trained on identity matching-to-sample, the researchers moved to the second phase of the experiment. This time, the birds were assessed with relational matching pairs of items.


These relational matching trials were arranged in such a way that neither test pairs precisely matched the sample pair, thereby eliminating control by physical identity. For example, the crows might have to choose two same-sized circles rather than two different-sized circles when the sample card displayed two same-sized squares.


What surprised the researchers was not only that the crows could correctly perform the relational matches, but that they did so spontaneously–without explicit training.


“That is the crux of the discovery,” Wasserman says. “Honestly, if it was only by brute force that the crows showed this learning, then it would have been an impressive result. But this feat was spontaneous.”


Still the researchers acknowledge that the crows’ relational matching behavior did not come without some background knowledge.


“Indeed, we believe that their earlier IMTS (identity matching-to-sample) training is likely to have enabled them to grasp a broadly applicable concept of sameness that could apply to novel two-item samples and test stimuli involving only relational sameness,” the researchers wrote. “Just how that remarkable transfer is accomplished represents an intriguing matter for future study.”


Anthony Wright, neurobiology and anatomy professor at the University of Texas-Houston Medical School, says the discovery ranks on par with demonstrations of tool use by some birds, including crows.


“Analogical reasoning, matching relations to relations, has been considered to be among the more so-called ‘higher order’ abstract reasoning processes,” he says. “For decades such reasoning has been thought to be limited to humans and some great apes. The apparent spontaneity of this finding makes it all the more remarkable.”


Joel Fagot, director of research at the University of Aix-Marseille in France, agrees the results shatter the notion that “sophisticated forms of cognition can only be found in our ‘smart’ human species. Accumulated evidence suggests that animals can do more than expected.”


Wasserman concedes there will be skeptics and hopes the experiment will be repeated with more crows as well as other species. He suspects researchers will have more such surprises in store for science.


“We have always sold animals short,” he says. “That human arrogance still permeates contemporary cognitive science.”



How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Chocolate-Fed Monkey Terrorizes Marseille Until Tasered


For several weeks the monkey had been provoking panic in Castellanne, a northern suburb of Marseille, La Provence newspaper reported.


At one point it even entered a primary school where “it caused bedlam and scratched some of the children” before heading to a senior school where it also left students frightened.


Worried residents have been bombarding police with calls to alert them to the presence of the monkey, that reportedly measured 80cm in height.


“We were given the location but by the time we turned up, it had disappeared. It happened every time,” a policeman told the local newspaper.


According to reports the monkey was abandoned among local youths, with whom it spent most of its time.


It was abused by some of the youths and rather than being fed appropriate food, it was kept on a diet of Kinder chocolate.


All of which could explain its aggressive attitude and why locals were making so many panicked phone calls to police.


Traps were set to try and catch the animal but to no avail.


Finally, after getting one distress call the police located the monkey but as they tried to detain it, the animal bit one of the officers.


So a Taser gun was brought out to neutralize it.


Full story here .

—————————————–


How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

среда, 17 декабря 2014 г.

DNA sheds light on why largest lemurs disappeared: Giant lemurs’ demise linked to size, low numbers

Ancient DNA extracted from the bones and teeth of giant lemurs that lived thousands of years ago in Madagascar may help explain why the giant lemurs went extinct. It also explains what factors make some surviving species more at risk today, says a study in the Journal of Human Evolution.



Most scientists agree that humans played a role in the giant lemurs’ demise by hunting them for food and forcing them out of habitats. But an analysis of their DNA suggests that the largest lemurs were more prone to extinction than smaller-bodied species because of their smaller population sizes, according to this team of American and Malagasy researchers.


By comparing the species that died out to those that survived, scientists hope to better predict which lemurs are most in need of protection in the future.


The African island of Madagascar has long been known as a treasure trove of unusual creatures. More than 80 percent of the island’s plants and animals are found nowhere else. But not long ago, fossil evidence shows there were even more species on the island than there are today. Before humans arrived on the island some 2,000 years ago, Madagascar was home to 10-foot-tall elephant birds, pygmy hippos, monstrous tortoises, a horned crocodile, and at least 17 species of lemurs that are no longer living — some of which tipped the scales at 350 pounds, as large as a male gorilla.


Using genetic material extracted from lemur bones and teeth dating back 550 to 5,600 years, an international team of researchers analyzed DNA from as many as 23 individuals from each of five extinct lemur species that died out after human arrival. They looked at a giant ruffed lemur, a baboon lemur, a koala lemur and two sloth lemurs — all housed in the collections at the University of Antananarivo and the Duke Lemur Center at Duke University. The study also included genetic data from eight extant species, including the three largest lemur species still alive today.


The researchers found that the species that died out had lower genetic diversity than the ones that survived — a hallmark of small population size.


The results aren’t entirely surprising, said George Perry, a scientist from Penn State University who was part of the research team. “Larger-bodied species often need larger territories and are fewer in number than smaller-bodied species,” he explained, so they would have been more susceptible to extinction as hunting, logging, farming and other human activities took their toll.


But the researchers hope that lessons learned from ancient DNA will be useful in protecting the species that remain.


More than 70 percent of the roughly 100 lemur species living today are now considered endangered or critically endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), making them the most threatened group of mammals on Earth, according to a paper published in 2014 in Science.


The team found no link between body size and genetic diversity in lemur species living today — the largest of which tip the scales at about 15 pounds. So they think that body size is less useful for establishing conservation priorities.


For this study the researchers looked only at mitochondrial DNA, which represents only a small portion of the DNA in each animal’s cells. Their next step is to try to sequence the DNA in the cell nucleus, where most of an organism’s genetic material is located.


“Analyzing nuclear DNA will enhance our understanding of the actual population sizes of the lemurs before they succumbed to extinction, which will better allow us to develop genetic ‘extinction alerts’ for living lemurs,” said study co-author Anne Yoder of Duke..


“We can also start to look at genes with known roles in traits like color vision and taste perception, to help expand our understanding of how these animals lived,” Perry said.


The research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation. Additional support was provided by the Ahmanson Foundation, the Theodore F. and Claire M. Hubbard Family Foundation, Conservation International, the Primate Action Fund, the Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation and the National Geographic Society.


“This publication will hopefully be a step towards unlocking the answers of why and how lemur diversity expanded across this large island and why so much of it has been lost,” said co-author Edward Louis of Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium.




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The above story is based on materials provided by Duke University . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.



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Linguistic methods uncover sophisticated meanings, monkey dialects

The same species of monkeys located in separate geographic regions use their alarm calls differently to warn of approaching predators, a linguistic analysis by a team of scientists reveals. The study, which appears in the journal Linguistics and Philosophy, reveals that monkey calls have a more sophisticated structure than was commonly thought.



“Our findings show that Campbell’s monkeys have a distinction between roots and suffixes, and that their combination allows the monkeys to describe both the nature of a threat and its degree of danger,” explains the study’s lead author, Philippe Schlenker, a Senior Researcher at Institut Jean-Nicod within France’s National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) and a Global Distinguished Professor at New York University.


The combined team of linguists and primatologists analyzed alarm calls of Campbell’s monkeys on two sites: the Tai forest in Ivory Coast and Tiwai Island in Sierra Leone. Notably, monkey predators on the two sites differ: the primates are threatened by eagles on Tiwai Island and by eagles and leopards in the Tai Forest.


Using transcriptions of these monkey calls gathered in field experiments involving playbacks of predator calls (e.g. eagle shrieks and leopard growls), the researchers found greater complexity in expression than previously understood as well as differences in alarm calls between the two locations.


Confirming with linguistic means some hypotheses initially made by primatologists, their analysis showed that these calls make a distinction between roots (especially “hok” and “krak”) and suffixes (-oo), and that their combination allows the monkeys to describe both the nature of a threat and its degree of danger. For instance, “hok” warns of serious aerial threats — usually eagles — whereas “hok-oo” can be used for a variety of general aerial disturbances; in effect the suffix -oo serves as a kind of attenuator.


Moreover, their results suggest that the calls are not used in the same way in the Tai Forest and on Tiwai Island. For instance, “krak” usually functions as a leopard alarm call in Tai, but as a general alarm call — to warn of all sorts of disturbances, including eagles — on Tiwai. The article seeks to explain why this ‘dialectal variation’ is found.


The authors’ preferred analysis is based on the device of ‘implicatures,’ borrowed from the pragmatics of human languages. It posits that the meaning of a word can be enriched when it competes with a more informative alternative — for instance, “possible” competes with “certain,” which is more informative, and for this reason “possible” usually comes to mean “possible but not certain” (for instance in: “It’s possible that John is the culprit” — which implies that this is not a certainty). The authors propose that “krak” always has a meaning of general alarm, but that in Tai it comes to be enriched by competition with “hok” (meaning: aerial threat) and “krak-oo” (meaning: weak threat) — with the result that it is enriched with a ‘not “hok” ‘ component (hence: the threat is a non-aerial threat) and a ‘not “krak-oo” ‘ component (hence: the threat is not weak). This yields a meaning of a ‘serious ground-related threat,’ closely associated with leopards.


In the long term, Schlenker observes, the research should help initiate the development of a form of “primate linguistics” — the application of sophisticated methods from contemporary formal linguistics to systems of animal communication.




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The above story is based on materials provided by New York University . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.



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Show us how you play and it may tell us who you are

The way in which toys are handled and combined with one another during object play can tell use a lot about the cognitive underpinnings of the actors. Object-object combinations, such as placing one toy on top of another can even be considered precursors of technically complex behaviours such as the use of tools. An international team of scientists around Alice Auersperg from the Department of Cognitive Biology at the University of Vienna presented parrot species as well as crow species with the same set of toys and found out that the birds willingly brought objects into complex spatial relationships: Behaviors that occur in only a few species of primates.



The ways animals play with inedible objects may be precursors of functional behaviors such as tool use and goal directed object manipulation. For these reasons, species of high technical intelligence are also expected to play intensely with inanimate objects when no obvious goal is pursued. Within object play, combinatory actions are considered a particularly informative trait in animals as well as human infants: Children start bashing two objects together when they are about 8 months old, at 10 months, they combine toys with elements from their environment, such as inserting them into cavities or stacking rings on a pole. Only after their second year, infants start using objects as tools to obtain a desired goal. In animals this has so far mainly been studied in primates. Within this group, complex object combinations during play are largely limited to capuchin monkeys and the four great ape species. These are also the species, which prominently stand among primates, for their innovative tool use abilities. Interestingly, within birds, the crow family as well as parrots have similar relative forebrain body sizes as the great apes and also perform at similar levels in many cognitive tasks.


To investigate the play behavior of parrots and crows researchers confronted groups of three crow species as well as a total of nine parrot species with an identical set of wooden toddler toys of different shape and colour categories as well as with a ‘playground’ offering various tubes and holes for insertions and poles for stacking rings. Whereas animals of most species interacted with the toys, complex object-object combinations were largely limited to a subset of the species. The frequency of playfully combining two free toys was highest in New Caledonian crows within crows and in Goffin cockatoos, Black Palm cockatoos and Kea within parrots. Goffins and New Caledonian crows even combined up to three toys. “New Caledonian crows are innate tool users and also the only crow known to regularly use and manufacture different types of foraging tools in the wild,” says Alice Auersperg from the University of Vienna who organized the study: “The Black Palm cockatoos are also habitual tool users, with the males using wooden logs as drum sticks to attack their females to potential breeding sites and to deter competitors. The Goffin cockatoo as well as the kea, although not innate tool users, have both repeatedly demonstrated the capacity for innovative and flexible tool use as well as high-level performances in problem solving tasks involving object manipulations in captivity.”


Again, only the aforementioned species also combined their toys with the tubes and poles of the playground at high rates. “Inserting behaviors occurred most frequently in New Caldonian crows, followed by Palm cockatoos and Goffin cockatoos, again, consistently with their tool use capacities,” says Auguste von Bayern from the University of Oxford. Only parrots stacked rings onto poles and tubes, the Goffin cockatoos notably more often than other species. “Fitting a frame over a fixed shape is likely to occur less frequently in natural situations than fitting a shape into a fixed frame and it may require a higher level of motor control,” adds von Bayern. The cockatoos even stacked the rings onto, or pulled them over, free stick-shaped objects, which is technically more challenging than if either frame or shape are fixed terms of beak foot coordination.


“Our findings parallel previous findings in primates,” says Alice Auersperg: “This further implies that some abilities substrates in large brained birds and primates may have evolved convergently.” Thomas Bugnyar from the University of Vienna concludes: “Our findings support the view that species that readily bring objects into complex spatial relationships with each other during play may be more likely to express flexible and innovative solutions to novel technical challenges in a problem solving context.”




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The above story is based on materials provided by University of Vienna . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.



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Barbary macaques form male bonds, study reveals

Male Barbary macaques form social bonds similar to human friendships to protect against disease and death, an international study has revealed.



Researchers studying wild Barbary macaque males living in their natural habitat in the Middle Atlas Mountains in Morocco discovered that keeping a few close male associates buffered against day-to-day stressors, decreasing the levels of the stress hormone glucocorticoid.


Elevated levels of the hormone over prolonged periods of time makes the monkeys more susceptible to illness and mortality. Such ‘friendships’ were previously only thought to be formed between females, making the discovery of these friendly relationships significant, researchers said.


The study, which was carried out by Germany’s University of Göttingen and the German Primate Center, the University of Lincoln, UK, and the University of South Africa, examined the ‘social buffering hypothesis’ which has also been proven to improve health in humans.


Co-author Dr Bonaventura Majolo, a behavioural ecologist based in the School of Psychology at the University of Lincoln, said: “Although male sociality has received little to no attention from scientists until recently, strong social bonds between males can yield a number of benefits, including increased dominance rank, and mating and paternity success.


This study shows that changes in everyday stressors such as the amount of aggression received or cold weather can cause long-term elevated glucocorticoid levels in wild male Barbary macaques, but keeping a few close male associates will avoid that.


We already know that female primates which lack these strong bonds show increased mortality and reduced offspring survival, whereas those who established and maintain strong bonds cope better with stressful situations and live a longer life.


Our findings show that males also benefit from maintaining strong bonds, and suggest that the ways in which social mammals affiliate, cooperate, and compete among each other is not fundamentally different in gregarious males and females.”


Links have previously been made between social bonds in humans and positive mental and physical health, and these new findings in primates help support the view that the fundamental ‘blocks’ of social behaviour are the same in humans and other social mammals.


The study is published in the US academic journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).




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The above story is based on materials provided by University of Lincoln . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.



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Wild Bonobo Is Seen Giving Birth, The First Time Such Behaviour Has Been Documented


A bonobo has been seen giving birth in the wild, the first time scientists have ever documented this most personal of moments occurring in the ape’s natural environment…


…During the birth event, which occurred at the Luikotale Bonobo Project field site, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the researchers discovered that wild bonobos do not give birth alone.


The new mother, a female called Luna, was surrounded by two other female bonobos offering companionship and support.


The birth also took place high up in a tree, rather than on the ground.


And shortly after the birth, the new mother and other females ate parts of the placenta.


Full story here .

—————————————–


How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

воскресенье, 14 декабря 2014 г.

Human DNA shows traces of 40-million-year battle for survival between primate and pathogen

Examination of DNA from 21 primate species — from squirrel monkeys to humans — exposes an evolutionary war against infectious bacteria over iron that circulates in the host’s bloodstream. Supported by experimental evidence, these findings, published in Science on Dec. 12, demonstrate the vital importance of an increasingly appreciated defensive strategy called nutritional immunity.



“We’ve known about nutritional immunity for 40 years,” says Matthew Barber, Ph.D., first author and postdoctoral fellow in human genetics at the University of Utah. “What this study shows us is that over the last 40 million years of primate evolution, this battle for iron between bacteria and primates has been a determining factor in our survival as a species.” The study also models an approach for uncovering reservoirs of genetic resistance to bacterial infections, knowledge that could be used to confront emerging diseases.


Following infection, the familiar sneezing, runny nose, and inflammation are all part of the immune system’s attempts to rid the body of hostile invaders. Lesser known is a separate defense against invasive microbes, called nutritional immunity, that quietly takes place under our skin. This defense mechanism starves infectious bacteria by hiding circulating iron, an essential nutrient it needs for survival. The protein that transports iron in the blood, transferrin, tucks the trace metal safely out of reach.


Clever as it sounds, the ploy is not enough to keep invaders at bay. Several bacterial pathogens — including those that cause meningitis, gonorrhea, and sepsis — have developed a weapon, transferrin binding protein (TbpA), that latches onto transferrin and steal its iron. Though scientists have known of the offensive strategy, they failed to realize how pivotal the battle over iron has been in the conflict between host and pathogen.


“Interactions between host and pathogen are transient and temporary,” says senior author Nels Elde, Ph.D., assistant professor of human genetics at the University of Utah. “It took casting a wide net across all of primate genetic diversity to capture the significance.”


Just as details of a struggle can be gleaned from battle scars, Barber and Elde reconstructed this evolutionary conflict by documenting when and where changes in transferrin and TbpA have occurred over millennia. They examined the DNA of transferrin in 21 species from the primate family tree, and of TbpA from dozens of bacterial strains. The majority of accumulated changes in transferrin and TbpA cluster around a single region of contact between the two proteins, highlighting it as a site of evolutionary conflict between host and pathogen. The authors then used these genetic observations as a guide to perform experiments, which showed changes in TbpA enable the protein to grasp hold of transferrin, and that recent changes in transferrin allow it to evade TbpA.


Up to 25 percent of people in the world’s populations have a small alteration in the transferrin gene, which prevents recognition by several infectious bacteria, the most recent sign of this long battle. “Up until this study no one had come up with a functional explanation for why this variation occurs at an appreciable frequency in human populations,” says Elde. “We now know that it is a consequence of the pathogens we and our ancestors faced over millions of years.”


Understanding the strategies that underlie natural defense mechanisms, including nutritional immunity, could inform new approaches to combatting antibiotic-resistant bacteria and emerging diseases. “By examining the natural conflicts that have played out for millions of years, we can determine what has worked, and apply them in new situations,” says Elde.


The work was supported by awards from the Pew Charitable Trusts and the National Institutes of Health




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The above story is based on materials provided by University of Utah Health Sciences . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.



How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

четверг, 11 декабря 2014 г.

Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

понедельник, 8 декабря 2014 г.

Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

пятница, 5 декабря 2014 г.

Unlike people, monkeys aren’t fooled by expensive brands

In at least one respect, Capuchin monkeys are smarter than humans — they don’t assume a higher price tag means better quality, according to a new Yale study appearing in the open-access journal Frontiers in Psychology.



People consistently tend to confuse the price of a good with its quality. For instance, one study showed that people think a wine labeled with an expensive price tag tastes better than the same wine labeled with a cheaper price tag. In other studies, people thought a painkiller worked better when they paid a higher price for it.


The Yale study shows that monkeys don’t buy that premise, although they share other irrational behaviors with their human relatives.


“We know that capuchin monkeys share a number of our own economic biases. Our previous work has shown that monkeys are loss-averse, irrational when it comes to dealing with risk, and even prone to rationalizing their own decisions, just like humans,” said Laurie Santos, a psychologist at Yale University and senior author of the study. “But this is one of the first domains we’ve tested in which monkeys show more rational behavior than humans do.”


Rhia Catapano, a former Yale undergraduate who ran the study as part of her senior honors thesis, along with Santos and colleagues designed a series of four experiments to test whether capuchins would prefer higher-priced but equivalent items. They taught monkeys to make choices in an experimental market and to buy novel foods at different prices. Control studies showed that monkeys understood the differences in price between the foods. But when the researchers tested whether monkeys preferred the taste of the higher-priced goods, they were surprised to find that the monkeys didn’t show the same bias as humans.


Santos and colleagues think that differences in the response of humans and capuchins could stem from the different experiences that monkeys and people have with markets and how they behave.


“For humans, higher price tags often signal that other people like a particular good.” Santos noted. “Our richer social experiences with markets might be the very thing that leads us — and not monkeys — astray in this case.”




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The above story is based on materials provided by Yale University . The original article was written by Bill Hathaway. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.



How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Parasites and the evolution of primate culture

Learning from others and innovation have undoubtedly helped advance civilization. But these behaviours can carry costs as well as benefits. And a new study by an international team of evolutionary biologists sheds light on how one particular cost — increased exposure to parasites — may affect cultural evolution in non-human primates.



The results, published Dec. 3, 2014 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, suggest that species with members that learn from others suffer from a wider variety of socially transmitted parasites, while innovative, exploratory species suffer from a wider variety of parasites transmitted through the environment, such as in the soil or water.


“We tend to focus on innovation and learning from others as a good thing, but their costs have received relatively little attention,” says McGill University biologist Simon Reader, co-author of the study. “Here, we uncover evidence that socially transmitted pathogen burdens rise with learning from others — perhaps because close interaction is needed for such learning — and environmentally transmitted pathogen burdens rise with exploratory behaviour such as innovation and extractive foraging.”


Chimpanzees, for example, live in groups and have a wide range of such behaviours, such as digging for food underground or eating new kinds of insects.. Previously, studies have not been able to determine whether costly parasites force primates to engage in more exploratory behaviour — by diversifying food sources, for example — or whether exploratory behaviour leads to their having more parasites, Reader notes. “Our results support the idea that exploratory and social behaviours expose primates to specific kinds of parasites.”


“The findings also lead to questions about how people and other primates have developed solutions to minimize these parasite costs — such as eating medicinal plants — and may help us better understand how the processes underlying human culture arose,” Reader says.


The research team, led by Collin McCabe of Harvard University and Charles Nunn of Duke University, based their analyses on databases obtained by surveying thousands of articles on primate behaviour and parasites.


Funding for the research was provided by the National Science Foundation, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research.




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The above story is based on materials provided by McGill University . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.



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New York Court Refuses ‘Legal Personhood’ Of Tommy The Chimpanzee


The plaintiff in a landmark lawsuit seeking legal rights for a chimpanzee has lost his case—for now.


A New York appeals court this morning rejected the lawsuit, filed by the Nonhuman Rights Project, on behalf of Tommy, a 26-year-old chimp kept alone by his owners in an upstate warehouse.


The Nonhuman Rights Project argued that Tommy should be considered a person—in legal terms, an entity capable of having rights, and in his case one specific right: not to be wrongfully imprisoned.


“Petitioner requests that this Court enlarge the common-law definition of ‘person’ in order to afford legal rights to an animal,” wrote the judges in their decision. “We decline to do so.”


Attorney Steven Wise, founder of the Nonhuman Rights Project, said they will appeal the decision to New York’s highest court. “We think the court was wrong in some very fundamental ways,” he said.


Full story here .

—————————————–


How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Study: Unlike People, Monkeys Aren’t Fooled By Expensive Brands


In at least one respect, Capuchin monkeys are smarter than humans — they don’t assume a higher price tag means better quality, according to a new Yale study appearing in the open-access journal Frontiers in Psychology.


People consistently tend to confuse the price of a good with its quality. For instance, one study showed that people think a wine labeled with an expensive price tag tastes better than the same wine labeled with a cheaper price tag. In other studies, people thought a painkiller worked better when they paid a higher price for it.


The Yale study shows that monkeys don’t buy that premise, although they share other irrational behaviors with their human relatives.


“We know that capuchin monkeys share a number of our own economic biases. Our previous work has shown that monkeys are loss-averse, irrational when it comes to dealing with risk, and even prone to rationalizing their own decisions, just like humans,” said Laurie Santos, a psychologist at Yale University and senior author of the study. “But this is one of the first domains we’ve tested in which monkeys show more rational behavior than humans do.”


Full story here .

—————————————–


How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past

Chimps Don’t Have Same Rights as Humans, Court Says

вторник, 2 декабря 2014 г.

Seattle Neighborhood Embraces Monkey Day With Monkey Themed Decorations

The Phinney Ridge and Greenwood neighborhoods hope an unusual holiday light display will draw visitors to the area. One-hundred-fifty LED monkeys are hanging inside and outside of businesses, and in the trees along Phinney and Greenwood Avenues.


Members of the business association got a grant from the city to help pay for the materials.


“Who doesn’t love a monkey,” organizer Mike Veitenhans said.


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How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Ability To Consume Alcohol May Have Shaped Primate Evolution


Craving a stiff drink after the holiday weekend? Your desire to consume alcohol, as well as your body’s ability to break down the ethanol that makes you tipsy, dates back about 10 million years, researchers have discovered. The new finding not only helps shed light on the behavior of our primate ancestors, but also might explain why alcoholism—or even the craving for a single drink—exists in the first place.


“The fact that they could put together all this evolutionary history was really fascinating,” says Brenda Benefit, an anthropologist at New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, who was not involved in the study.


Scientists knew that the human ability to metabolize ethanol—allowing people to consume moderate amounts of alcohol without getting sick—relies on a set of proteins including the alcohol dehydrogenase enzyme ADH4. Although all primates have ADH4, which performs the crucial first step in breaking down ethanol, not all can metabolize alcohol; lemurs and baboons, for instance, have a version of ADH4 that’s less effective than the human one. Researchers didn’t know how long ago people evolved the more active form of the enzyme. Some scientists suspected it didn’t arise until humans started fermenting foods about 9000 years ago.


Matthew Carrigan, a biologist at Santa Fe College in Gainesville, Florida, and colleagues sequenced ADH4 proteins from 19 modern primates and then worked backward to determine the sequence of the protein at different points in primate history. Then they created copies of the ancient proteins coded for by the different gene versions to test how efficiently each metabolized ethanol. They showed that the most ancient forms of ADH4—found in primates as far back as 50 million years ago—only broke down small amounts of ethanol very slowly. But about 10 million years ago, the team reports online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a common ancestor of humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas evolved a version of the protein that was 40 times more efficient at ethanol metabolism.


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How and where to find cheap monkeys for sale



Oil Dispute Takes a Page From Congo’s Bloody Past