使用工具,或者不使用工具,这是一个问题:必要性假说对非洲类人猿来说真的无关紧要吗?

Shelly Masi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究动物使用工具的驱动因素对于理解动物的认知和人类使用工具的进化具有重要意义。必要性假说认为工具的使用是应对粮食短缺的必要手段,但其作用仍在争论中。比较动物工具使用频率的最大文献体是关于灵长类动物的,特别是在Pan物种之间的比较。这支持了一种假设,即野生倭黑猩猩很少使用工具,是因为黑猩猩的不同操作能力,而不是不同的生态需求。在这篇文章中,我的目的是丰富关于猿类工具使用的必要性假设和生态驱动因素的讨论。倭黑猩猩较高的进食灵活性可能是解释倭黑猩猩比黑猩猩更少使用进食工具的一个关键方面。倭黑猩猩的饮食灵活性与野生类人猿中使用工具水平最低的大猩猩相似。因此,大猩猩可以帮助进一步阐明这一争论。当水果稀缺时,西方大猩猩和倭黑猩猩比黑猩猩更依赖于广泛存在的富含蛋白质的草药,而黑猩猩仍然非常喜欢吃水果。因此,黑猩猩可能更有必要寻找一种替代方法来获得高质量的食物:工具辅助喂养。一个间接的证据表明,这种更高水平的草食是倭黑猩猩肠道纤毛虫的患病率是黑猩猩的两倍。在每种动物中,在动物灵活使用工具的过程中,需要、机会、倾向和学习过程的不同组合可能起着作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tool use, or not tool use, that is the question: is the necessity hypothesis really inconsequential for the African great apes?
Investigating the drivers of tool use in animals has recently received great attention because of its implication in understanding animals’ cognition and the evolution of tool use in hominins. The necessity hypothesis posits tool use as a necessary response to food scarcity, but its role is an ongoing debate. The largest body of literature comparing animal tool use frequencies is with regard to primates, particularly comparisons between the Pan species. This supports the hypothesis that tool use is rarer in wild bonobos because of differential manipulation abilities of chimpanzees rather than different ecological needs. In this article, I aim to enrich the discussion concerning the necessity hypothesis and the ecological drivers of tool use in apes. The higher feeding flexibility of bonobos may be a key aspect to explaining the lower use of feeding tools than that observed in chimpanzees. The diet flexibility of bonobos is similar to that of the lowest level of tool users among the wild great apes: the gorilla. Gorillas can thus help to shed further light on this debate. When fruit is scarce, Western gorillas and bonobos rely more on widely available proteinaceous herbs than chimpanzees, who remain highly frugivorous. Chimpanzees may thus face a greater necessity to search for an alternative to obtain high-quality food: tool-assisted feeding. An indirect piece of evidence for this higher level of herbivory is that the prevalence of gut ciliates in bonobos is double that of chimpanzees. In each animal species, a different combination of necessity, opportunities, predisposition, and learning processes are likely to be at play in the emergence of flexible tool use in animals.
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