Bonobo Cognition and Behaviour

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Bonobo Cognition and Behaviour

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 323 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9789004304161
  • DDC分類 591.5

Full Description

This volume includes twelve novel empirical papers focusing on the behaviour and cognition of both captive and wild bonobos (Pan paniscus). As our species less known closest relative, the bonobo has gone from being little studied to increasingly popular as a species of focus over the past decade. Overall this volume demonstrates how anyone interested in understanding humans or chimpanzees must also know bonobos. Bonobos are not only equal to chimpanzees as our relatives, but they are also unique.

The majority of papers in this volume show that whether you are interested in the evolution of culture and tool use, social relationships and sharing or foraging ecology and cognition, bonobos have a major contribution to make. Four papers provide further evidence that the behaviour and psychology of bonobo females is radically different from that observed in chimpanzees. Foraging behaviour and cognition of bonobos is the focus of three papers that each show important ways that bonobos spatial cognition differs remarkably from chimpanzees. Two papers are relevant to solving the puzzle of why bonobos are expert extractive foragers in captivity but have never been seen using tools to obtain food in the wild.

The articles presented in this volume are previously published in a Special Issue of Behaviour, Volume 152, Parts 3-4 (March 2015).

Contents

Moving bonobos off the scientifically endangered list

Brian Hare and Shinya Yamamoto

Relationship quality in captive bonobo groups

Jeroen M.G. Stevens, Evelien De Groot and Nicky Staes

Prolonged maximal sexual swelling in wild bonobos facilitates affiliative interactions between females

Heungjin Ryu, David A. Hill And Takeshi Furuichi

Sex and strife: post-conflict sexual contacts in bonobos

Zanna Clay and Frans B.M. De Waal

Non-reciprocal but peaceful fruit sharing in wild bonobos in Wamba
Shinya Yamamoto

Can fruiting plants control animal behaviour and seed dispersal distance?

David Beaune, François Bretagnolle, Loïc Bollache, Gottfried Hohmann and Barbara Fruth

Context influences spatial frames of reference in bonobos (Pan paniscus)

Alexandra G. Rosati

The influence of testosterone on cognitive performance in bonobos and chimpanzees

Victoria Wobber and Esther Herrmann

Why do wild bonobos not use tools like chimpanzees do?

T. Furuichi, C. Sanz, K. Koops, T. Sakamaki, H. Ryu, N. Tokuyama and D. Morgan

A comparative assessment of handedness and its potential neuroanatomical correlates in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and bonobos (Pan paniscus)

William D. Hopkins, Jennifer Schaeffer, Jamie L. Russell, Stephanie L. Bogart, Adrien Meguerditchian and Olivier Coulon

Bonobos and chimpanzees exploit helpful but not prohibitive gestures

Evan L. Maclean and Brian Hare

Preference or paradigm? Bonobos show no evidence of other-regard in the standard prosocial choice task

Jingzhi Tan, Suzy Kwetuenda and Brian Hare

Experimental evidence that grooming and play are social currency in bonobos and chimpanzees

Kara Schroepfer-Walker, Victoria Wobber and Brian Hare

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