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Wild and zoo-housed orangutans differ in how they explore objects

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Laumer_2-1r765msqumfg20.pdf
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Datum

2025

Autor:innen

Kansal, Shubhangi
van Cauwenberghe, Anais
Rahmaeti, Tri
Setia, Tatang Mitra
Mundry, Roger
Haun, Daniel
Schuppli, Caroline

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Swiss National Science Foundation: P400PM_180844

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Open Access Gold
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Scientific Reports. Springer. 2025, 15(1), 14853. eISSN 2045-2322. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-97926-z

Zusammenfassung

In human infants, exploratory object manipulations (henceforth called “EOM”) stimulate cognitive development and affect cognitive performance in later life. Zoo-housed great apes are frequently used to study the evolution of human cognition, however, it is unknown how the zoo environment affects their daily expression of EOM. We investigated how wild and zoo-housed Sumatran orangutans differ in their daily EOM throughout life. We collected ~ 12′000 EOM events by 51 wild and zoo-housed individuals of all ages. Zoo-housed orangutans showed significantly higher EOM rates than wild orangutans. Exploratory actions were more diverse in zoos than in the wild, even with objects available in both settings. Zoo-housed orangutans also showed a larger repertoire of exploratory actions and a higher probability of multi-object exploration, including tool use. There was no difference between settings at which age individuals first showed specific exploratory actions. Our results show that the zoo environment significantly affects EOM in orangutans and that the species’ exploratory potential exceeds its natural expression. This may have important implications for cognitive performance, as zoo-housed individuals are likely to have a broader range of affordances to draw from when confronted with novel problems. These results highlight the potential of captive-wild comparisons to study cognitive development and evolution.

Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache

Fachgebiet (DDC)
570 Biowissenschaften, Biologie

Schlagwörter

Exploration, Exploratory object manipulation, Captive-wild comparison, Cognitive development, Cognitive aging, Great ape

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ISO 690LAUMER, Isabelle, Shubhangi KANSAL, Anais VAN CAUWENBERGHE, Tri RAHMAETI, Tatang Mitra SETIA, Roger MUNDRY, Daniel HAUN, Caroline SCHUPPLI, 2025. Wild and zoo-housed orangutans differ in how they explore objects. In: Scientific Reports. Springer. 2025, 15(1), 14853. eISSN 2045-2322. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-97926-z
BibTex
@article{Laumer2025-04-30zooho-74804,
  title={Wild and zoo-housed orangutans differ in how they explore objects},
  year={2025},
  doi={10.1038/s41598-025-97926-z},
  number={1},
  volume={15},
  journal={Scientific Reports},
  author={Laumer, Isabelle and Kansal, Shubhangi and van Cauwenberghe, Anais and Rahmaeti, Tri and Setia, Tatang Mitra and Mundry, Roger and Haun, Daniel and Schuppli, Caroline},
  note={Article Number: 14853}
}
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