Animals
Orangutan Whistles Like a Human
By Stéphan Reebs, Natural History Magazine
posted: 24 March 2009 08:41 am ET
Now thirty years old, Bonnie lives at the Smithsonian's National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C. In the 1980s, she probably heard a happy caretaker whistling, and she soon made whistles of her own, seemingly just for the fun of it.
Recently, a team of primatologists, led by Serge A. Wich of the Great Ape Trust of Iowa in Des Moines, took a closer look at Bonnie's abilities.
By comparing recordings, they confirmed that the sounds she makes are nothing like normal orangutan
sounds or vocalizations, and that her whistling tends to be imitative.
For example, she usually replicates the duration and number of whistles
(one or two) that caretakers produce in front of her.
Other orangutans and chimpanzees
known to produce unusual sounds have typically received extensive
training — yet Bonnie isn't alone in her spontaneous whistling. Another
National Zoo orangutan named Indah also took up the habit, but died
before she was recorded. And Wich says that since publishing, he's
heard from workers at other zoos with whistling orangutans in their
care.
The research was detailed in the journal Primates.
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