RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
Cool.
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
Seeing how we evolved right before our eyes
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
RT @Rainmaker1973: Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoe…
Japanese monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water. After some generations they started to carry the potatoes to the sea. Their motivation might have been to get the salty taste: a first strong evidence of cultural behavior in nonhuman animals
"TIL that monkeys in Japan learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water to clean them. They later switched to washing sweet potatoes in salt water. It is theorized that this is because they like the salty taste more than plain potatoes." https://t.co/Eius
Monkeys in Japan learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water to clean them. They later switched to washing sweet potatoes in salt water. It is theorized that this is because they like the salty taste more than plain potatoes. https://t.co/D4jArsLvJC
#TIL that monkeys in Japan learned to wash sweet potatoes in fresh water to clean them. They later switched to washing sweet potatoes in salt water. It is theorized that this is because they like the salty taste more than plain potatoes. https://t.co/ZOygH
@faktoider Hittade förresten den här när jag dubbelkollade lite fakta för artikeln, där man menar att det ursprungligen bara var tänkt som en metafor. (Det var inte riktigt som en metafor jag fick höra om det i tidiga tonåren.) https://t.co/Gd2Au3IePV http
Sweet-potato washing revisited: 50th anniversary of the Primates article | SpringerLink https://t.co/BZjmOoqF4S
Qual outro exemplo de uso de tempero em alimentos entre animais não-humanos além dos macacos japoneses q lavam batata doce na água do mar? https://t.co/sJ1rySm3h1
This is probably the first time on television that a wild primate was referred to by anyone by their name? Imo, the original inventor of this culture on Koshima https://t.co/sABgfAqeO2 #BangorDoesPrimates #Primates #LifeInTheTrees
This is one of the best-documented cases of invention in primates and a classic in the field of cultural primatology: https://t.co/sABgfAqeO2 #BangorDoesPrimates #Primates #LifeInTheTrees
We were speaking about this last week at the course. Awareness energy apparently is real. https://t.co/ZFwyGzO240
Sweet-potato washing revisited 50 yrs on: a brief history by Matsuzawa http://t.co/mWRyVUILTf #springerlink #animalculture #macaques