Orangutan attempts to hunt fish with spear
By DAILY MAIL UK
Added: Sun, 27 Apr 2008 23:00:00 UTC
Thanks to Pulsar1z for the link.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/technology/technology.html?in_article_id=562236&in_page_id=1766&ito=1490
Orangutan attempts to hunt fish with spear
A male orangutan, clinging precariously to overhanging branches, flails the water with a pole, trying desperately to spear a passing fish.
It is the first time one has been seen using a tool to hunt.
The extraordinary image, a world exclusive, was taken in Borneo on the island of Kaja, where apes are rehabilitated into the wild after being rescued from zoos, private homes or even butchers' shops.
"Orang hutan" means "forest man" in one of Indonesia's many languages and our long-armed cousins do indeed show a remarkable ability to mimic our behaviour.
This individual had seen locals fishing with spears on the Gohong River.
Although the method required too much skill for him to master, he was later able to improvise by using the pole to catch fish already trapped in the locals' fishing lines.
The image is part of a series taken for a new book, The Thinkers Of The Jungle, which also includes the first photograph of an orangutan swimming.
Thinkers Of The Jungle, by Gerd Schuster, Willie Smits and Jay Ullal, is published by Ullmann Publishing on May 5, RRP £29.99.
Tweet
RELATED CONTENT
Rare neurons found in monkeys’ brains
Laura Sanders - Science News 4 Comments
Cells linked to empathy and consciousness in primates may offer clues to human self-awareness
A Mathematical Challenge to Obesity
CLAUDIA DREIFUS - New York Times 15 Comments
Carson C. Chow deploys mathematics to solve the everyday problems of real life. As an investigator at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, he tries to figure out why 1 in 3 Americans are obese.
Stone-Throwing Chimp Thinks Ahead
ScienceNow - Wired 17 Comments
A stone-throwing chimpanzee named Santino jolted the research community by providing some of the strongest evidence yet that nonhumans could plan ahead.
Crows know familiar human voices
Victoria Gill - BBC Nature 13 Comments
Human Societies Starting to Resemble...
Jennifer Viegas - Discovery News 27 Comments
The similarities offer a look at just how ever-growing human societies could collapse.
Neurons in Bird Brains Encode Earth's...
Rebecca Boyle - PopSci 8 Comments
Pigeons have a reliable internal GPS



















Comments
Comment RSS Feed
Please sign in or register to comment
View Comments Page