Abstract

Male Diana monkeys produce loud and acoustically distinct alarm calls to leopards and eagles that propagate over long distances, much beyond the immediate group. Calling is often contagious, with neighbouring males responding to each other’s calls, indicating that harem males communicate both to local group members and distant competitors. Here, we tested whether male Diana monkeys responding to each other’s alarm calls discriminated familiar from unfamiliar callers in two populations in Taï Forest (Ivory Coast) and on Tiwai Island (Sierra Leone). At both sites, we found specific acoustic markers in male alarm call responses that discriminated familiar from unfamiliar callers, but response patterns were site-specific. On Tiwai Island, males responded to familiar males’ eagle alarms with ‘standard’ eagle alarm calls, whereas unfamiliar males triggered acoustically atypical eagle alarms. The opposite was found in Taï Forest where males responded to unfamiliar males’ eagle alarm calls with ‘standard’ eagle alarms, and with atypical eagle alarms to familiar males’ calls. Moreover, only Taï, but not Tiwai, males also marked familiarity with the caller in their leopard-induced alarms. We concluded that male Diana monkeys encode not only predator type but also signaller familiarity in their alarm calls, although in population-specific ways. We explain these inter-site differences in vocal behaviour in terms of differences in predation pressure and population density. We discuss the adaptive function and implications of this behaviour for the origins of acoustic flexibility in primate communication.

Highlights

  • Some of the most interesting examples of complex animal behaviour come from studies on predator-specific alarm calls, 2016 The Authors

  • We have shown that male and female Diana monkeys differ in their alarm calling behaviour in habitat-specific ways

  • We tested different groups of Diana monkeys in Taï forest (N = 20, August to December 2013) and on Tiwai Island (N = 23, January to March 2014) with playbacks of familiar and unfamiliar male Diana monkey alarm calls to leopards and eagles

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Summary

Introduction

Some of the most interesting examples of complex animal behaviour come from studies on predator-specific alarm calls, 2016 The Authors. We simulated the presence of familiar and unfamiliar males to wild Diana monkeys in Taï Forest (Ivory Coast) and Tiwai Island (Sierra Leone) by playing back previously recorded alarm calls to leopard and eagle playbacks. Discrimination of familiar and unfamiliar males is only relevant in specific predatory contexts (i.e. to infer the urgency of predation attempts by leopards), we hypothesized Taï males to show this assessment in alarms but not Tiwai males. If this socially related information were relevant on its own, categorization should be encoded in both habitats to alarms induced by leopard playbacks

Subjects and playback stimuli
Experimental procedure
Data analysis and statistics
Call-related parameters
Sequence-related parameters
Response-related parameters
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