posted on 2022-03-10, 14:21authored byCarly H. Batist, Jessica A. Mayhew
<p>Lemurs have been relatively understudied in cognitive
research despite representing an adaptive radiation and occupying a key
phylogenetic position as the most basal extant primate lineage. Many of the
existing studies have focused on only one lemur species. We aimed to take a
comparative approach by examining learning abilities in 66 lemurs from four
genera at the Duke Lemur Center in North Carolina. We used a novel two-action puzzle
box to assess inter-species variation in learning speed, task proficiency, and social
tolerance during trials. We found differences between genera in the percentage
of individuals who had successes, individuals' latency to touch the apparatus
and the number of times an individual observed a group member’s success. <i>Eulemur</i> and <i>Varecia</i> had shorter latencies and were observed more by
conspecifics compared to <i>Propithecus</i>
and <i>Lemur</i>. Shorter latencies may
indicate reduced fear or increased motivation, while higher observation rates
suggest more leniency or tolerance around the puzzle boxes. These results may
be due to species differences in dominance and rank hierarchies; <i>Propithecus </i>and <i>Lemur </i>are more despotic than <i>Eulemur</i>,
where some species exhibit sex co-dominance, and <i>Varecia, </i>which live in groups with high fission-fusion dynamics. We
also show that even within these overall relationships, the different genera
varied substantially in the temporal trajectory of these learning variables
through the study trials. Overall, this comparative study provides preliminary
insights into the taxon-specific learning trajectories of lemurs and
contributes to the growing body of literature examining lemur cognition.</p>