Abstract

In comparative studies of evolution of communication, the function and use of animal quiet calls have typically been understudied, despite that these signals are presumably under selection like other vocalizations, such as alarm calls. Here, we examine vocalization diversification of chimpanzee quiet ‘hoos’ produced in three contexts—travel, rest and alert—and potential pressures promoting diversification. Previous playback and observational studies have suggested that the overarching function of chimpanzee hoos is to stay in contact with others, particularly bond partners. We conducted an acoustic analysis of hoos using audio recordings from wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) of Budongo Forest, Uganda. We identified three acoustically distinguishable, context-specific hoo variants. Each call variant requires specific responses from receivers to avoid breaking up the social unit. We propose that callers may achieve coordination by using acoustically distinguishable calls, advertising their own behavioural intentions. We conclude that natural selection has acted towards acoustically diversifying an inconspicuous, quiet vocalization, the chimpanzee hoo. This evolutionary process may have been favoured by the fact that signallers and recipients share the same goal, to maintain social cohesion, particularly among those who regularly cooperate, suggesting that call diversification has been favoured by the demands of cooperative activities.

Highlights

  • Within the framework of the evolution of communication, how and why some species have greater call diversity than2018 The Authors

  • Discriminant function loadings and cross-classification scores showed that rest hoos discriminated well from travel hoos, having longer call duration

  • Adding information about the call bout, increased discrimination considerably, in so far as alert hoos were emitted at lower rates compared to travel hoos, while rest hoos were almost exclusively emitted as single calls

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Summary

Introduction

Within the framework of the evolution of communication, how and why some species have greater call diversity than2018 The Authors. Context specificity has been well documented in alarm calls, for example the predator-specific vocalizations of vervet monkeys ([8,9] but see [5]). Alarm calls have been well studied when examining the evolution of vocal diversity. One relevant line of research has demonstrated that if a prey species regularly encounters various predators that differ in their hunting behaviour, this can lead to the evolution of acoustically distinct, predator-specific alarm calls, a process well documented in social carnivores [11,13] and nonhuman primates [9]. In other words, can be one of the main causes for the evolution of call diversity

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