
Monkeys kidnap babies of another species in weird 'fad'
PARIS — A new trend is catching on among bored young male capuchins: Kidnapping baby howler monkeys, in what scientists say is the first time animals have been recorded stealing another species' infants for no apparent reason.
PhD student Zoe Goldsborough first noticed something wrong in 2022 while sifting through footage captured by motion-triggered cameras on Jicaron, an island off the coast of Panama.
"I was very shocked" to see a white-faced capuchin monkey with a baby howler monkey on its back, Goldsborough, a researcher at Germany's Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour, told AFP.
The scientists nicknamed the capuchin Joker because the small scar at the side of its mouth reminded them of the "Batman" villain.
After reviewing more footage, they spotted Joker carrying four different howler monkey babies.
At first, they thought this was the "heartwarming story of a weird capuchin adopting these infants", said Goldsborough, the lead author of a new study in the journal Current Biology.
Then the scientists started finding other cases not involving Joker. They eventually observed five capuchins carrying 11 different howler infants over a 15-month period.
Then team then discovered footage of mournful howler monkey parents calling for their lost babies, showing that the infants had actually been abducted.
A deadly trend
The researchers were puzzled because the capuchins did not eat or prey on the babies, nor did they seem to enjoy playing with them.
Goldsborough said they eventually realised these abductions were a social tradition or "fad" among the island's young male capuchins.
It is the first time one species has been documented repeatedly abducting the infants of another due to the spread of such a tradition, study co-author Brendan Barrett told AFP.
The trend came with a high price: Four howler babies were observed to have died, but the researchers believe none survived.
Exactly how the capuchins manage to kidnap the babies remains a mystery.
The abduction likely takes place in the trees, and the cameras cover only the ground at the island's Coiba National Park.
"They're very successful at it, because they seem to even be able to get a one- or two-day-old infant off its mother," Goldsborough said.
The capuchins also do not suffer injuries, despite adult howler monkeys being three times their size.
Cultural fads spreading among animals is rare but not unheard of.
Barrett has previously studied capuchins in Costa Rica that suddenly started grooming porcupines, before growing bored of the trend.
And back in the 1980s, killer whales took to donning dead salmon on their heads off the north-western US coast.
This trend returned decades later when orcas were again spotted wearing these "salmon hats" last year.
'Agents of chaos'
The researchers started recording the capuchins in 2017 because they skilfully use stone tools to crack nuts and shellfish.
The capuchins have no predators and plenty of food on the island, leaving them a lot of free time to mess around.
"They're little exploratory agents of chaos," Barrett said.
While this extra time to experiment could result in socially learned traditions such as using tools, it could also lead to "seemingly arbitrary things" like stealing the howler infants, he said.
The study covered only abductions recorded until July 2023, but Goldsborough said there had been at least one more baby taken since, though they have not been through all the footage.
There might have been a drop in kidnappings simply because the capuchins have fewer babies to steal -- the island's howler monkeys are classified as endangered.
The researchers also want to study whether the normally docile howler monkeys will start becoming more fearful -- or aggressive -- towards the previously harmless capuchins.
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