In a first, chimpanzees seen smashing and eating tortoises This is the first time the apes have been observed preying upon any type of reptile, using a “percussive” technology akin to tool use.
Gia, a female chimpanzee, twice tried and failed to smash a tortoise. But in this instance, a male chimp smashed the reptile and shared the meat. By Douglas Main Tortoises’ thick shells protect them from most predators. But our closest relatives have found a way to circumvent this defense: vigorously bashing them against trees. In a paper published today in the journal Scientific Reports, scientists report seven chimpanzees breaking open forest hinge-back tortoises in Gabon’s Loango National Park. The behavior occurred on multiple occasions over 5,000 hours of observation, and the primates often shared the meat with others in their group. This is the first time than any chimpanzee has been documented eating any kind of reptile. It’s also unique because the way in which the primates eat these tortoises—slamming them against tree branches and trunks—is a type of “percussive” technology that is akin to tool use, says study coauthor Simone Pika, who studies chimpanzees at Germa...