Pinching Figs Could Help Explain The Origin Of Our Fine Motor Skills

Page 1

One of the key features that allowed humans as a species to develop and dominate was our ability to craft complex stone tools. This skill is in turn underpinned by ourfine motor control skills andthe precise movementof our fingers. How we first gainedthis aptitude has remained somewhat of a mystery, buta new study may shed some light. By looking at how wild chimpanzees select figs to eat, a team of researchers suggest that the dexterity they use to determine whether the fruit is ripe or not could give insight into the ecological origins of the fine motor skills needed to maketools. This is different to themultitude of other species that feed on the figsfrom birds to other primates, which rely on vision and smell aloneand could give a route through which such skills could be selected for. The supreme dexterity of the human hand is unsurpassed among mammals, a fact that is often linked to early tool use, explains Nathaniel J. Dominy, lead author of the study published inInterface Focus, in astatement. A problem is that we know little about the selective pressures that favored the advanced manual skills of chimpanzees and other apes. These skills were the cognitive foundation for the origin of our extraordinary hands, a trait that made all the difference. Figs are a vitally important food source for up to 1,200 different species of vertebrates living in the tropics. Along with the fact that figs produce a high-energy fruit and come intoseason all year, the plant isa keystone species in many of the forests in which they grow. It has already been suggested that the consumption of figs by primates has driven the evolution of one aspect of their biologythe visual systemas in many species the fruits change from green to yellow or red when ripe. But not all fig species do this, with some remaining green the entire time. This means that animals have to develop other ways in which to test the ripeness of these figs in order to gain the fruit's peaknutritional value. Many species use smell, while other primates observed by the researchers were found to test them with a little bite. The chimps were found to do both of these, but they also did something no other species did: They gave them a little squeeze. This, the researchers found, increased the efficiency of the chimps in testing theripeness ofas many different figs as possible, giving them a substantial foraging advantage over birds and other monkeys. The researchers suggest that this could be a viable explanation as to how such fine motor skills were originally selected forand which in turn could have been used to craft tools by early humans. Read more:http://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/pinching-figs-could-help-explain-origin-ourfine-motor-skills Pinching Figs Could Help Explain The Origin Of Our Fine Motor Skills

1/1 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.