Tool Use and Tool Making in Wild Chimpanzees
- 14 February 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Brill in Folia Primatologica
- Vol. 54 (1-2) , 86-99
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000156428
Abstract
Reported incidences of tool use and tool making for three wild chimpanzee populations increase from Mahale (12 and 3 types of use and making, respectively), Gombe (16 and 3) to Taï (19 and 6). Sticks are commonly used and prepared at all three sites. However, Taï chimpanzees seem to perform more modifications on the material before using it. They are also the only chimpanzees seen to pound objects with tools and to combine two different tool uses to get access to one food item. Tool making is the rule for abundant material (grass, twigs), but appears to be rarer for scarce, hard material (clubs, stones). Factors involved in the acquisition and the benefit of tool use are discussed along with factors affecting the frequency and complexity of tool making in chimpanzees.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Scavenging or Hunting in Early Hominids: Theoretical Framework and TestsAmerican Anthropologist, 1986
- The Behaviour of Free-living Chimpanzees in the Gombe Stream ReserveAnimal Behaviour Monographs, 1968
- Newly-acquired pre-cultural behavior of the natural troop of Japanese monkeys on Koshima isletPrimates, 1965