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Intelligent Chimps - they like honey.

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Len of the Chilterns

Len of the Chilterns Report 3 Jun 2009 23:08

Nothing remains unchanged. Perhaps, if humans allow them to survive as a species in the wild, eventually chimps will evolve into a more advanced form. However, with humans destroying the habitat of chimps (and all other forest dwelling animals) at an ever increasing rate, it is likely that they will survive only as captives in zoos in which case they are more likely to deteriorate.

Kaz in a Tizz

Kaz in a Tizz Report 30 May 2009 23:45

Wow Len that is an incredible piece of research - What does it mean tho'? That chimps are evolving as we did? It perhaps doesn't surprise me as I believe they are very close to us DNA wise. But what has taken them so long?

On a purely unintellectual note - I thought of the 'Planet of the Apes' films when I read your post..... but only briefly lol

Kaz :o))

Len of the Chilterns

Len of the Chilterns Report 30 May 2009 22:31

A team led by Christophe Boesch of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, studied chimps living in Loango National Park in Gabon. They found that the chimps built and used five different types of tools to help them find beehives and extract honey: thin, straight sticks to probe the ground for buried nests; thick, blunt-ended pounders to break open beehive entrances; thinner lever-like enlargers to break down walls within the hive; collectors with frayed ends to dip honey from the opened hive and bark spoons to scoop it out. Various tools were often found near the same hive, suggesting that the chimps employ them in sequence (Journal of Human Evolution, DOI: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2009.04.001).

A few tools even appeared to have two uses, with enlargers at one end and collectors at the other. This is the first example of a non-human species constructing multipurpose tools.

A few tools had two uses: the first example of a non-human species making multipurpose tools
Some of the tools would require several steps to make, so making and using the entire toolkit implies an impressive ability to plan ahead, compared with, say, cracking a nut with a stone.

Probing for underground hives also requires the chimps to conceive of the existence of unseen objects. The mental skills needed for this and the tasks that follow rival those displayed by humans in the early Stone Age, says Boesch. Indeed, he believes the desire to successfully obtain honey could have been one of the pressures that favoured increased intelligence as humans evolved.(New Scientist)