The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Some monkeys may share food to win a mate

St Andrews University expert discovers complex and flexible social lives

- CLAIRE WARRENDER cwarrender@thecourier.co.uk

The sharing of food between primates may aid monkey business, new research has found.

A St Andrews University expert has discovered monkeys sharing food in the wild could be the equivalent of humans taking a date out to dinner.

While mothers give food to their offspring, adult monkeys rarely share.

Lead researcher Camille Troisi now believes some species may do so in the hunt for potential mates.

Ms Troisi, of the university’s Centre for Social Learning and Cognitive Evolution, has reported six recorded events of food transfers between adult golden lion tamarins in different groups.

She said this suggested the species had a more complex and flexible social life than previously thought.

“Given that individual­s emigrate from their natal group to find opportunit­ies to reproduce, I suggest that those food transfers could be a way for individual­s to estimate the quality or availabili­ty of potential mates or social partners.

“Although the function of food transfers between groups is not fully understood and requires more experiment­al work, the six observatio­ns reported here contribute to our understand­ing of the flexibilit­y of social behaviour in primates.”

Golden lion tamarins are unique in terms of the large number of food transfers to young monkeys as well as the prevalence of sharing among adults.

The type of food shared, especially with pregnant females, is also unusual.

Ms Troisi said those food transfers can provide nutrition and informatio­n about what foods are good to eat.

“Previously, providing nutrition and informatio­n had been regarded as the two main functions of food transfers in tamarins,” she said.

“However, these new observatio­ns suggest there may be a third one – to create social connection­s.”

Until now, all sharing of food between primates had been observed between individual­s of the same group, expect for bonobos where researcher­s recently saw an individual sharing with members of a neighbouri­ng community.

“Could be a way for individual­s to estimate the quality or availabili­ty of potential mates. CAMILLE TROISI

 ?? Picture: St Andrews University. ?? Golden lion tamarins enjoying a snack.
Picture: St Andrews University. Golden lion tamarins enjoying a snack.

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