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Article
Laterality in Termite-Fishing by Fongoli Chimpanzees: Preliminary Report
PAN Africa News
  • Paco Bertolani, University of Cambridge
  • Clarissa Scholes, University of Cambridge
  • Jill D. Pruetz, Iowa State University
  • William C. McGrew, University of Cambridge
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
6-1-2007
Abstract
Many studies in both free-ranging and captive apes have shown that some forms of laterality of hand function occur in non-human primates1. However, true handedness (sensu McGrew and Marchant2), when most individuals show a skew in hand preference in the same direction across different tasks, seems to be restricted to humans. Other hominoids appear unlateralized in simpler tasks, such as reaching, picking up objects, and grooming3, but they show hand preference for more complex tasks, such as tool-using2, 4, 5 or elaborate food processing6, 7. Laterality in termite-fishing8 has been studied only at Gombe, and the two published data-sets are congruent. McGrew and Marchant2, 9 reported that most (27 of 36) chimpanzees showed an individualized hand preference for right or left, as did Lonsdorf and Hopkins10 (16 of 17) for termite-fishing in the same community. No other data have been published for chimpanzee communities elsewhere. This study asks if termite-fishing by Fongoli chimpanzees is lateralized, shows hand preference (individuals are lateralized, but with no populational preference for either hand), or task specialization (all or most individuals use the same hand).
Comments

This is an article from PAN Africa News 14 (2007): 1. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
PAN Africa News
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Paco Bertolani, Clarissa Scholes, Jill D. Pruetz and William C. McGrew. "Laterality in Termite-Fishing by Fongoli Chimpanzees: Preliminary Report" PAN Africa News Vol. 14 Iss. 1 (2007) p. 1 - 3
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jill-pruetz/12/