Abstract

In animal communication, signallers and recipients are typically different: each signal is given by one subset of individuals (members of the same age, sex, or social rank) and directed towards another. However, there is scope for signaller–recipient interchangeability in systems where most signals are potentially relevant to all age–sex groups, such as great ape gestural communication. In this study of wild bonobos (Pan paniscus), we aimed to discover whether their gestural communication is indeed a mutually understood communicative repertoire, in which all individuals can act as both signallers and recipients. While past studies have only examined the expressed repertoire, the set of gesture types that a signaller deploys, we also examined the understood repertoire, the set of gestures to which a recipient reacts in a way that satisfies the signaller. We found that most of the gestural repertoire was both expressed and understood by all age and sex groups, with few exceptions, suggesting that during their lifetimes all individuals may use and understand all gesture types. Indeed, as the number of overall gesture instances increased, so did the proportion of individuals estimated to both express and understand a gesture type. We compared the community repertoire of bonobos to that of chimpanzees, finding an 88 % overlap. Observed differences are consistent with sampling effects generated by the species’ different social systems, and it is thus possible that the repertoire of gesture types available to Pan is determined biologically.

Highlights

  • Animal communication includes a vast array of signalling systems, ranging from the warning colouration of noxious insects to the complexity of human language

  • In this study of wild bonobos (Pan paniscus), we aimed to discover whether their gestural communication is a mutually understood communicative repertoire, in which all individuals can act as both signallers and recipients

  • We recorded 4256 intentionally produced gesture instances used within E1 and P groups, which we classified into 68 gesture types (Online Resource 1): the bonobo community repertoire

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Summary

Introduction

Animal communication includes a vast array of signalling systems, ranging from the warning colouration of noxious insects to the complexity of human language. In many other communication systems, the signals that an individual can use are strictly limited by their age, sex, or social position. Females direct visual signals towards males, for example, the bioluminescent signals of fireflies (Lewis and Cratsley 2008) or cowbird wing strokes (West and King 1988). This visual signal given only by females is in response to a vocal signal given only by males (West and King 1988), illustrating that both sexes are signallers and recipients, they are not signallers and recipients of the same signal

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