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Predator guild does not influence orangutan alarm call rates and combinations
Authors:Adriano R Lameira  Han de Vries  Madeleine E Hardus  Cedric P A Hall  Tatang Mitra-Setia  Berry M Spruijt  Arik Kershenbaum  Elisabeth H M Sterck  Maria van Noordwijk  Carel van Schaik  Serge A Wich
Institution:1. Behavioural Biology Group, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 80086, Utrecht, 3508 TB, The Netherlands
2. Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, Amsterdam University, P.O. Box 94248, Amsterdam, 1090 GE, The Netherlands
3. Fakultas Biology, Universitas Nasional, Jl. Sawo Manila, Pejaten, Pasar Minggu, Jakarta, 12520, Indonesia
4. National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, 37996-3410, USA
5. Ethology Research, Animal Science Department, Biomedical Primate Research Center, Postbox 3306, 2280 GH, Rijswijk, The Netherlands
6. Anthropological Institute and Museum, Zurich University, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057, Zurich, Switzerland
7. Research Centre in Evolutionary Anthropology and Palaeoecology, School of Natural Sciences and Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University, Egerton Court, 2 Rodney Street, Liverpool, L3 5UX, UK
Abstract:Monkey alarm calls have shown that in the primate clade, combinatorial rules in acoustic communication are not exclusive to humans. A recent hypothesis suggests that the number of different call combinations in monkeys increases with increased number of predator species. However, the existence of combinatorial rules in great ape alarm calls remains largely unstudied, despite its obvious relevance to ideas about the evolution of human speech. In this paper, we examine the potential use of combinatorial rules in the alarm calls of the only Asian great ape: the orangutan. Alarm calls in orangutans are composed of syllables (with either one or two distinct elements), which in turn are organized into sequences. Tigers and clouded leopards are predators for Sumatran orangutans, but in Borneo, tigers are extinct. Thus, orangutans make a suitable great ape model to assess alarm call composition in relation to the size of the predator guild. We exposed orangutans on both islands to a tiger and control model. Response compositionality was analyzed at two levels (i.e., syllable and syllable sequences) between models and populations. Results were corroborated using information theory algorithms. We made specific, directed predictions for the variation expected if orangutans used combinatorial rules. None of these predictions were met, indicating that monkey alarm call combinatorial rules do not have direct homologues in orangutans. If these results are replicated in other great apes, this indicates that predation did not drive selection towards ever more combinatorial rules in the human lineage.
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