News Animals For Chimps, This Small Gesture Is a Big Deal Researchers recorded a chimp sharing just for sharing's sake. By Mary Jo DiLonardo Mary Jo DiLonardo Senior Writer University of Cincinnati Mary Jo DiLonardo has worked in print, online, and broadcast journalism for 25 years and covers nature, health, science, and animals. Learn about our editorial process Published December 15, 2022 11:10AM EST Fact checked by Haley Mast Fact checked by Haley Mast Harvard University Extension School Haley Mast is a freelance writer, fact-checker, and small organic farmer in the Columbia River Gorge. She enjoys gardening, reporting on environmental topics, and spending her time outside snowboarding or foraging. Topics of expertise and interest include agriculture, conservation, ecology, and climate science. Learn about our fact checking process Fiona, right, shows her mother a leaf. Dr. Claudia Wilke / University of York. News Environment Business & Policy Science Animals Home & Design Current Events Treehugger Voices News Archive It was just a small gesture, but it spoke volumes. Researchers were watching two chimpanzees in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Adult female Fiona was sitting with her mother, Sutherland. Fiona was grooming her mother when she stopped to take a small leaf from a nearby tree. When chimps are grooming each other, they sometimes pluck leaves and touch them with their mouths or fingers as if they are grooming them. Researchers aren’t exactly sure why they do it, but it’s a common practice. In this particular situation, Sutherland wasn’t paying attention while her daughter groomed the leaf. Fiona held it out to Sutherland and then moved her arm when she didn’t quickly get a response. Once Sutherland looked toward the leaf, moving her head and eyes toward it, Fiona withdrew the leaf and continued working on it. While it might seem like an innocuous encounter, researchers were excited. The exchange was an example of “referential gesturing,” where an individual uses a gesture to draw another’s attention to something. In this case, the chimp was showing the leaf just for the sake of sharing something. Until now, that was believed to be something only humans do. “We assumed that the ability and motivation to show others things simply for the sake of sharing evolved in the human lineage after we diverged from our last common ancestor,” study author Katie Slocombe, a psychology professor at the University of York in the United Kingdom, tells Treehugger. “Our observations suggest that chimps also do this in specific circumstances, it seems likely that the ability might have been present in our last common ancestor, so the question then changes from how did this ability and motivation arise in the human lineage, to, what selection pressures made humans engage in this behavior at much higher frequencies.” Slocombe and other researchers were observing chimpanzee mothers and infants as part of a large study on early communication and joint attention. Looking for Explanations After capturing footage of the sharing encounter, researchers analyzed 80 similar leaf-grooming experiences to see if there was another explanation for the behavior they saw with Fiona and Sutherland. “We examined 84 other leaf grooming events to see if the leaf is ever given to onlookers, or eaten (it’s not, so it's unlikely an attempt at food sharing), or if it's used habitually to request grooming or play from others (and we found little evidence of this),” Slocombe says. “Instead, we found that in the majority of events another individual paid close visual attention to the leaf being groomed, making it likely that this simultaneous attention on the leaf is what Fiona was likely hoping to achieve with her mother (given her mother had ignored her leaf grooming until she showed her the leaf).” The findings were published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers say they are continuing to study chimp interactions to see if they can find other examples of the animals showing these sharing behaviors. They say the findings could further the understanding of how human social cognition evolved and what makes the minds of humans unique. Slocombe says, “We hope the publication of this observation will encourage other researchers to look out for other examples in the future or to find examples from their video archives that they had maybe overlooked.” View Article Sources Wilke, Claudia, et al. “Declarative referential gesturing in a wild chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes).” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 119, no. 47, 2022, doi:10.1073/pnas.2206486119 "Showing off: Wild Chimpanzees Show Others Objects Simply to Share Attention." University of York, 2022. study author Katie Slocombe, psychology professor at the University of York in the United Kingdom