Zoƫ Goldsborough Profile picture
Researcher of animal behaviour, ethics, and welfare / PhD student studying social learning and tool use @IMPRS_OrgBio @livingingroups @unikonstanz /She/her

Feb 26, 2021, 10 tweets

New paper alert! šŸ“£šŸµ

As part of a special issue in Behaviour on anecdotes, we describe how an immigrant chimpanzee female adopted a local female-specific tradition after introduction to a captive group. A thread 1/8

#chimpanzees #openaccess

brill.com/view/journals/ā€¦

With my wonderful co-authors @ejcvanleeuwen, @cwebb218, and Frans de Waal, we provide the first report of this tradition, we dubbed the "crossed-arm walk" (see gif), which has been present in the chimpanzee group @burgerszoo for over 20 years. 2/8

When two new females (Moni, left, and Erika, right) were introduced to the group, Moni copied the crossed-arm walk days after meeting only the resident female in the gif above. Erika never showed the behavior during >1 year of observation. 3/8 šŸ“·:@KaylaKolff

Two years later, Moni, who copied the behavior, appeared more socially integrated than Erika. This could of course be due to other things as well (notably see our other publication on Moni experiencing a stillbirth) 4/8 link.springer.com/article/10.100ā€¦

Still, our findings may also point towards a known phenomenon in humans: similarity breeding connection. Adopting the crossed arm walk may have helped Moni integrate in her new group. Moni was also in a more socially insecure position than Erika at the start of introduction. 5/8

Previous studies have shown chimpanzees adopting local conventions after migration, but in our report the speed at which Moni copied the behavior (within days after being exposed to it) is especially remarkable. 6/8

This anecdote illustrates that immigrant female chimpanzees can show different behaviors during the integration process. Introducing chimpanzees to a new group isn't easy, and new individuals may use strategies like behavioral copying to mitigate the risk of exclusion. 7/8

Lastly, we wouldn't be able to write this article without the zookeepers and their amazing records, so a big thank you to them!

And to the chimpanzees themselves of course! Especially Moni for single-handedly inspiring two publications šŸµ

8/8

And truly last, a very big thank you to @KaylaKolff for helping with the data collection! She was my partner in crime during the first (biggest) chunk of observations, and you should definitely check out her research on jealousy in these chimps!
link.springer.com/article/10.100ā€¦

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