Dog Companions

Monkeys are cute but are not domesticated animals
Dogs are domesticated and cute and our best friends.
Choose a dog every time over exotic pets and you will be happier.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Bonnie the Whistling Oranguatang

Whistling Orangutan Impresses Zoo Researchers



At the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., Bonnie the orangutan has been amazing researchers with her
special talent: Bonnie knows how to whistle.

Those notes are a symphony to the ears of primate researchers who believe her musical abilities could
lead to a greater understanding of how human speech evolved.

"I think what makes it significant is that you can train apes to whistle, but no one trained her to do
it. She decided to do it on her own," says Erin Stromberg, who works in the National Zoo's Great Ape
house and helps care for the orangutans.

Stromberg helped publish a recent paper on Bonnie's talents. Researchers believe Bonnie was trying to
imitate the sounds of zookeepers who whistle while they work. Stromberg says Bonnie's ability to copy
that sound is powerful evidence that apes can re-create the sounds of other species.

"So what's significant about Bonnie learning to whistle is not that she's able to do it, it's that she
saw someone else do it and just picked it up," Stromberg says.

Bonnie is 32 years old, with dark orange hair and a big round belly, and weighs in at a svelte 140
pounds. She lives in a concrete enclosure with plenty of things to climb up and swing down. A large
window allows spectators to look in, and Bonnie to look right back at them.

Bonnie has been mimicking her zookeepers' movements for years. She likes to sweep the floors and wash the
windows, although she uses dirty rags to do it.

When she started whistling, researchers decided to test her gift for mimicking sounds. They asked
Stromberg to whistle basic patterns to see whether Bonnie could copy them. It turned out to be easier for
the ape than for the human — Stromberg isn't a great whistler — so the researchers kept it simple.

"I would give a long whistle, and would she then in turn imitate me? Or if I do a short whistle, would
she do a short whistle? And she would," Stromberg says. "She was pretty good at following what I was
doing. I think what makes it significant is that she decided to do it on her own. Something made her want
to whistle, or at least try it out. And so to me, she was challenging herself to do something else."



Jessie Cohen/NZP
Bonnie, an orangutan at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., has learned how to whistle, a feat zookeepers say she learned by being around humans.

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