Abstract

What determines the number of cultural traits present in chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) communities is poorly understood. In humans, theoretical models suggest that the frequency of cultural traits can be predicted by population size. In chimpanzees, however, females seem to have a particularly important role as cultural carriers. Female chimpanzees use tools more frequently than males. They also spend more time with their young, skewing the infants' potential for social learning towards their mothers. In Gombe, termite fishing has been shown to be transmitted from mother to offspring. Lastly, it is female chimpanzees that transfer between communities and thus have the possibility of bringing in novel cultural traits from other communities. From these observations we predicted that females are more important cultural carriers than males. Here we show that the reported number of cultural traits in chimpanzee communities correlates with the number of females in chimpanzee communities, but not with the number of males. Hence, our results suggest that females are the carriers of chimpanzee culture.

Highlights

  • Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) cultures exhibit considerable variation between communities [1]

  • We found a significant correlation between the number of females in chimpanzee communities and the reported number of cultural traits (Fig. 1)

  • We found no such correlation between reported number of cultural traits and male group size, and only an indication of a correlation with total community size

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Summary

Introduction

Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) cultures exhibit considerable variation between communities [1]. Cultural traits are carried by individuals and inherited through social learning. The number of cultural traits that can exist in a population depends on the number of individuals that are available to learn from. The diversity of cultural traits present in human populations can be theoretically predicted to increase with community size [6,7]. This relationship potentially explains the geographic variation in the timing of the first appearance of modern behaviour, as manifested through advanced human culture, during the Pleistocene without invoking increased cognitive capacity [7]. We test if the relationship between cultural diversity and community size holds true for chimpanzees

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