Monkeys exchange grooming as common currency for food and sex
July 1st, 2009 - 2:15 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, July 1 (ANI): A French researcher has found that grooming acts as a common currency among monkeys, and that the non-human primates exchange it for food, greater tolerance from dominant members of the group, and sex.
Ronald Noe, associated with the University of Strasbourg, created an artificial market in groups of vervet monkeys by introducing a plastic box filled with food that only one subordinate female was trained to open. The aim was to see how the exchange system works.
The researcher says that just an hour after the female opened the box, it was observed that she was rewarded by being groomed more often and for longer by other group members, and that she could afford to groom dominant group members less often.
Noe and colleagues later halved the importance of the female’s ability to provide food, by introducing a second lunch box that only a second female could open.
The first female’s grooming “stock value” decreased, while the second monkey’s rose, until both arrived at roughly the same value and were groomed for the same amount of time.
“One can say that the second provider was groomed at a cost of the first provider,” New Scientist magazine quoted Noe as saying.
A research article describing the study has been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)
- Bats shown to form human-like friendships - Feb 09, 2011
- Like humans, monkeys too can recall what they've seen! - Apr 29, 2011
- Monkey jab may open way for HIV vaccine - May 12, 2011
- 'Cautious' monkeys can anticipate fights - May 30, 2010
- Monkeys become more calculating around money - Sep 22, 2010
- Chimps lose out by 'aping dominant member of the group' - Apr 24, 2011
- Birth control pills do not cause weight gain: Study - Jan 20, 2011
- Regular aerobic exercise keeps the brain healthy - Apr 27, 2010
- Having BFFs helps female baboons live longer - Jul 02, 2010
- Primates more resilient than other animals to seasonal ups and downs - Dec 02, 2010
- Monkeys' grooming habits provide new insights into how we socialise - Oct 02, 2009
- Monkeys' fighting behaviour could give insights into human wars - May 14, 2010
- Social stress makes you fat - Aug 06, 2009
- Like humans, monkeys too are adept in the art of deceiving - Jun 19, 2009
- Attentive males can pick up sexual cues better - Apr 06, 2011
Tags: academy of sciences, amount of time, colleagues, dominant group, exchange system, french researcher, group members, human primates, journal proceedings, july 1, lunch box, national academy of sciences, new scientist magazine, proceedings of the national academy, proceedings of the national academy of sciences, research article, stock value, strasbourg, time one, vervet monkeys