野生チンパンジーにおける加齢と道具使用の関係を調査(Past their prime? Tool use declines with age in wild chimpanzees)

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2025-07-15 オックスフォード大学

オックスフォード大学の研究により、野生チンパンジーの道具使用が加齢に伴い減少することが判明。ギニア・Bossouで17年間にわたり高齢個体(39~61歳)を観察した結果、加齢により道具使用の頻度や効率が低下し、野外実験場への参加率も減少。ただし個体差も存在し、高齢でも高い能力を維持する例も確認された。本研究は、加齢が霊長類の道具使用行動に与える影響を示し、ヒトの老化行動の理解にも寄与する。

<関連情報>

高齢化がチンパンジーの石器使用における関与と効率に様々な影響を与える Old age variably impacts chimpanzee engagement and efficiency in stone tool use

Elliot Howard-Spink,Tetsuro Matsuzawa,Susana Carvalho,Catherine Hobaiter,Katarina Almeida-Warren,Thibaud Gruber,Dora Biro
eLife  Published:Jul 15, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.105411.3

野生チンパンジーにおける加齢と道具使用の関係を調査(Past their prime? Tool use declines with age in wild chimpanzees)

Abstract

We know vanishingly little about how long-lived apes experience senescence in the wild, particularly with respect to their foraging behaviors. Chimpanzees use tools during foraging, and given the cognitive and physical challenges presented by tool use, tool-use behaviors are potentially at a heightened risk of senescence, though this has never been investigated in wild individuals. Accordingly, we sampled data from a longitudinal video archive that contained footage of wild chimpanzees using stone hammers and anvils to crack hard-shelled nuts (nut cracking) at an ‘outdoor laboratory’ over a 17-year period (with focal chimpanzees aging from approximately 39–44 to 56–61 years across this period). Over time, elderly chimpanzees began attending experimental nut-cracking sites less frequently than younger individuals. Several elderly chimpanzees exhibited reductions in efficiency across multiple stages of nut cracking, including taking longer to both select stone tools prior to use and use tools to crack open nuts and consume the associated pieces of kernel. Two chimpanzees began using less streamlined behavioral sequences to crack nuts, including a greater number of actions (such as more numerous hammer strikes). Notably, we report interindividual variability in the extent to which elderly chimpanzees’ tool-use behaviors changed during our sample period – ranging from small to profound reductions in engagement and efficiency – as well as differences in the specific aspects of nut cracking that changed for each individual. We discuss the possible causes of these changes – and recommendations for future research – with reference to literature surrounding the senescence of captive and wild primates.

生物環境工学
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