Cameras on a remote island in Panama captured the origin and spread of a bizarre -fad-
To the point

- Animal abduction: On Panama-s Jicarón island, biologists documented five male capuchin monkeys carrying at least eleven different infant howler monkeys-a behavior never before seen in wild primates.
- Rise and spread: The sightings were remotely recorded by over 85 camera traps, which allowed scientists to pinpoint the origin and subsequent spread of this social tradition over a 15-month period. (See interactive timeline https://www.ab.mpg.de/671374/Capuchin-tool-use/interspecies-abduction-tradition).
- Novel animal tradition: The research offers the first known documentation of a cultural tradition in which animals repeatedly abduct and carry infants of another species-without any clear benefit to themselves.
On an island off the coast of Panama lives a population of wild primates with a remarkable culture. White-faced capuchins on Jicarón Island in Coiba National Park use stone tools; and scientists have been monitoring this unique tradition with an array of motion-triggered cameras on the island since 2017. In 2022, doctoral researcher Zoë Goldsborough was looking through the camera trap footage when she found an unusual sighting, something they had never seen in the previous five years of data: a capuchin monkey carrying an infant howler monkey on his back.
The influencer
Goldsborough manually dug through the tens of thousands of images and videos collected by all cameras deployed around this time period. She found not one, but four different howler infants being carried. In nearly all cases, the carrier was the same individual: a subadult male she named Joker. These observations raised several questions. How did Joker get these infants? And why did he carry them for days at a time?-At first, we thought it could be adoption,- says Goldsborough. Anecdotes exist of some animals adopting babies of other species. In a well-known case from 2006, a pair of capuchins adopted a baby marmoset and succeeded in raising it into adulthood. But there was a problem with this interpretation: animal adoption is almost always carried out by females, who presumably do it to practice -caringfor infants. -The fact that a male was the exclusive carrier of these babies was an important piece of the puzzle,- she adds.
Eventually, though, the researchers struck the motherlode: they discovered a series of images and video, timestamped five months later, of more howler infants being carried. The authors called on a howler monkey expert, Lisa Corewyn at Ithaca College, who verified that the babies were separate individuals. -We assumed that Joker was at it again,- says Goldsborough. But they soon realized that the carrying behavior had in fact spread to four other capuchins-all young males.
The spread
Over the course of 15 months, these five capuchins carried 11 different howler monkeys for up to 9-day periods. The camera footage showed the howler babies clinging to the backs or bellies of their young male carriers who appeared to be going about their normal business of travelling or using tools to crack open food sources. The researchers collated the footage on an interactive website -The complete timeline tells us a fascinating story of one individual who started a random behavior, which was taken up with increasing speed by other young males,- says Barrett. The authors describe this as a social tradition or cultural fad-a behavior that spreads in a population through social learning. It parallels trends observed in other animals, such as killer whales donning -salmon hatsor chimpanzees wearing a blade of grass in their ears like an accessory.Social learning gone wrong?
The white-faced capuchins on Jicarón island have developed a unique tradition of using stone tools to crack open hard foods like nuts and shellfish. Interestingly, the capuchins that use tools on Jicarón are only males-just like the howler kidnappers-hinting that these two socially learned traditions might spring from the same source: boredom.
Looking forward
The study-s camera trapping period ran from January 2022 to July 2023, and the team does not know to what extent the tradition persisted afterwards as all data has not yet been analyzed. But, if the behavior spreads to other capuchin groups or continues to impact howlers, which are an endangered species on Jicarón, it could become a conservation issue in Coiba National Park.-Witnessing the spread of this behavior had a profound effect on all’of us,- says Crofoot. -We therefore feel even more responsible to keep learning from this natural population of primates who, to our knowledge, are the only ones on earth to be practicing this strange tradition.

