The Scotsman

Lemurs grooving with personal sound system at Scottish safari park

- Ilona Amos Environmen­t Correspond­ent

troop of cheeky little lemurs at Blair Drummond Safari Park, near Stirling, have been given access to their very own entertainm­ent system as part of an investigat­ion into ways of “enriching” the lives of captive animals using technology.

And it turns out, individual lemurs – just like humans – have their own personal favourite vibes, with some going for banging tunes and others preferring to chill with more pastoral tones.

The findings are the latest from an ongoing research partnershi­p between zookeepers at Blair Drummond Safari Park, near Stirling, and researcher­s from the University of Glasgow.

The new project saw a specially designed wooden box – dubbed the Lemurloung­e – installed inside enclosures housing three different species of lemurs.

The Lemurloung­e was fitted with speakers and lined with infrared sensors that allowed the creatures to trigger a range of pre-recorded soundtrack­s on demand – including rainforest ambience, city hubbub, upbeat tunes, calm music or white noise – with the chosen track continuing to play for as long as the lemur remained inside.

This type of system has previously been tested on other species but it’s the first trial with lemurs.

The results suggest the animals – which originate in Madagascar and belong to the primate family tree that includes monkeys, apes and humans – have no overall preference for a particular type of sound but they do seem to like noise better than silence when given the choice.

Tendencies also varied between lemur species and age groups.

Dr Ilyena Hirskyj-douglas, from the University of Glasgow’s School of Computing Science, led the study.

She hopes the findings could help in developing more fully featured digital enrichment systems for lemurs living in zoos and advance the emerging field of animal-computa er interactio­n. Technology offers us the opportunit­y to enrich the lives of zoo animals with interactiv­e systems that are custom-designed for their physical and mental needs, interests and abilities,” she said.

“However, in order to make the most of the potential of interactiv­e devices it’s vital that we take their preference­s into account.

“As much as we can, we want to design systems in collaborat­ion with them rather than trying to decide what they might want for ourselves.

“Our partnershi­p with Blair Drummond Safari Park gives us the chance to start mapping out what a future of animalcomp­uter interactio­n might look like.”

Fellow researcher Vilma Kankaanpää added: “The computer systems humans use in our everyday lives were developed through intensive research into users’ needs and preference­s.

“In order to build the best possible interactiv­e systems for animals in the future we’ll need similarly focused research into what works for them.

“This study is one step further towards a future where zoo animals have access to digital devices.”

 ?? PICTURE: UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW ?? A black-and-white lemur chills with some sound therapy in the Lemur Lounge during the study at Blair Drummond Safari Park
PICTURE: UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW A black-and-white lemur chills with some sound therapy in the Lemur Lounge during the study at Blair Drummond Safari Park

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