10 things you should know about monkeys and apes
1. Let sleeping apes lie
Great apes build platforms in trees to sleep on. Experts believe a good night’s sleep may have played a fundamental role in the evolution of great apes. That and the Teasmaid.
2. The smoking Mandrill
In the 1800s, Jerry the Mandrill was taught to drink and smoke and was accepted by high society, even having dinner with the king. He then joined the House of Lords where he remained undetected for many years.
3. For the fun of it
Rhesus macaques are thrillseekers that enjoy jumping off lampposts in India into just a foot of water.
Adrenaline junkies
Rhesus macaqeus in India divebomb from a lamppost just for fun.
4. Gorilla chuckle
Gorillas use their voices in various ways to express contentment, fear, humour and laughter, and make a panting sound which is a ‘gorilla chuckle’. It can often be heard in the audiences of Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ sitcoms.
How to talk to gorillas
Ape expert Ian Redmond reveals the calls he and Dian Fossey used to befriend gorillas
5. Memory test
Chimpanzees and orangutans were able to remember past events when presented with sensory reminders. Both species remembered where a useful tool was hidden three years after performing a task with it.
6. Gardeners of the forest
Monkeys and apes are essential to the health of the forest. They are seed dispersal agents and gardeners. Some fear that without them we may not have any have forests in the future.
7. Monkey drunk
In the 17th century there were different categories of drunkenness. Someone who got up and danced chaotically was called ‘monkey drunk’ or as we now call them ‘weekend stag do in Prague drunk’.
8. Gone fishing
Chimpanzees use tools to fish for termites and to get honey from bees’ nests. Different societies of chimps use different tools to do the same job.
Termite fishing
Gombe chimps catch tasty termites using twigs as tools.
9. Planners of the apes
Gorillas are able to plan for the short-term future. Their trails reveal they take shortcuts in order to run around other groups of gorillas to get ahead of them.
10. Lovers not fighters
Bonobos have sex every six hours on average. Bonobos are the least aggressive of the apes and physical violence almost never occurs – they make love, not war! Plus, they like to laugh...
Sources: Radio 4 Natural Histories, Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One Monkey Planet, Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Earth, Dawn to Dusk, Animals in Love and Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ News.
Monkeys and Apes
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Test your knowledge of monkeys and apes in the movies.
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Mr A. Mandrill has had enough. He's trying to sue the entire human race.
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Charlotte Uhlenbroek on primate variety and the difference between monkeys and apes.
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Charlotte Uhlenbroek believes we have much to learn from our charismatic cousins.
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