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Orangutan Kiss
September 08, 2022
Orangutan's Vocabularies Are Shaped by Socializing With Others, Just Like Humans
A new study reveals apes have distinct and flexible 'vocal personalities,' opposed to a fixed repertoire of calls
Frisky orangutan grabs woman’s breasts, lays on sloppy kiss at zoo
The tourist was posing for a photo when the ape tried its luck
Orangutans use slang to ‘show off their coolness’, study suggests
Primates come up with new ‘kiss-squeak’ alarm calls that spread quickly through communities, research says
Tool use in wild orang-utans modifies sound production: a functionally deceptive innovation?
Culture has long been assumed to be uniquely human but recent studies, in particular on great apes, have suggested that cultures also occur in non-human primates. The most apparent cultural behaviours in great apes involve tools in the subsistence context
Sociality predicts orangutan vocal phenotype | Nature Ecology
Mar 21, 2022 ... Accordingly, to prevent ecological and social confounding effects, we analysed orangutans' primary alarm call, the kiss-squeak. This call type
Orangutan Kisses Pregnant Woman's Belly In Bittersweet Moment
The Dodo serves up emotionally and visually compelling, highly sharable animal-related stories and videos to help make caring about animals a viral cause
BOS Orangutan Releases: Hide-And-Go-Kiss-Squeak - Orangutan
Oct 18, 2018 ... BOS Orangutan Releases: Hide-And-Go-Kiss-Squeak. Text by: Andrea Knox, PRM Coordinator at Camp Totat Jalu, Bukit Batikap Protection Forest
Orangutans make musical instrument
The evidence is mounting that culture isn't something unique to us humans: Orangutans in Borneo have developed and passed along a way to make a useful, improvised instrument, researchers report
Orangutan "Kiss Squeaks" Could Give Insight Into Evolution Of Human Language
Feb 9, 2017 ... But it was another sound that interested the researchers, known as a "kiss squeak" due to how the orangutans make it. In a similar way to how we
Orangutans are the only great apes—besides humans—to ‘talk' about the past
New finding may shed light on the evolution of language
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