Orangutans plan their travel route up to one day in advance and communicate it to other members of their species - an ability earlier attributed to only humans, a new study has found.
In order to attract females and repel male rivals, orangutans call in the direction in which they are going to travel, researchers said.
Anthropologists at the University of Zurich have found that not only captive, but also wild-living orangutans make use of their planning ability.
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But in recent years, clever experiments with great apes in zoos have shown that they do remember past events and can plan for their future needs.
Anthropologists have now investigated whether wild apes also have this skill, following them for several years through the dense tropical swamplands of Sumatra.
Orangutans generally journey through the forest alone, but they also maintain social relationships. Adult males sometimes emit loud 'long calls' to attract females and repel rivals. Their cheek pads act as a funnel for amplifying the sound in the same way as a megaphone.
Females that only hear a faint call come closer in order not to lose contact. Non-dominant males on the other hand hurry in the opposite direction if they hear the call coming loud and clear in their direction.
"To optimise the effect of these calls, it thus would make sense for the male to call in the direction of his future whereabouts, if he already knew about them," said Carel van Schaik.
"We then actually observed that the males travelled for several hours in approximately the same direction as they had called," said van Schaik.
In extreme cases, long calls made around nesting time in the evening predicted the travel direction better than random until the evening of the next day.
Schaik and his team conclude that orangutans plan their route up to a day ahead.
In addition, the males often announced changes in travel direction with a new, better-fitting long call. Researchers also found that in the morning, the other orangutans reacted correctly to the long call of the previous evening, even if no new long call was emitted.
"Our study makes it clear that wild orangutans do not simply live in the here and now, but can imagine a future and even announce their plans. In this sense, then, they have become a bit more like us," said van Schaik.