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    • College of Letters and Science
    • Department of Anthropology
    • Anthropology Archived Journals
    • Field Notes (Archived Journal)
    • Field Notes. Volume 08
    • View Item
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    Analysis of Intraspecific Communication Plasticity in Captive Female Orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus)

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    Date
    2020-11-05
    Author
    Cooper, Sara
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    Abstract
    Social plasticity, the adjustment of social behavioral expression to the nuances of daily life, is an important facet of primate communication because it is a response to the selective pressures that make one form of communication more advantageous over another when utilized in specific social situations (Oliveira 2012). In this study examining social plasticity of orangutan communication as a function of sex, I compare the time budgets of communicative behaviors among female Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) at the Lowry Park Zoo, Florida. Sex-based social plasticity was defined as a behavioral difference between same-sex and opposite-sex interactions. Data collection included 65 hours of video, recorded observations, and frame-by-frame analysis using focal animal sampling. Communicative behavior differed significantly between same-sex and opposite-sex interactions (χ 2=35.13, df=1, p
    Subject
    Primatology
    zoology
    evolutionary anthropology
    primate communica-tion
    animal cognition
    primate social behavior
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/94614
    Type
    article
    Part of
    • Field Notes. Volume 08

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