Baboons do not view researchers as neutral
(9 July 2020)
Baboons who are used to researcher presence are less tolerant than we thought, according to a new study by our anthropologists.
It had been widely presumed that researchers can use habituation to remove the fear that study animals have towards them, leading to animals ignoring people at close range. This allows researchers to collect behavioural data directly, under the assumption they dont influence the animals behaviours.
It had also been assumed that all animals are equally used to the presence of researchers.
The study explored these assumptions in a group of wild chacma baboons in the western Soutpansberg Mountains of South Africa that were habituated to researchers over many years.
Using a behavioural experiment, the study measured the distances at which an animal will look towards and flee from the approaching threat of a researcher walking directly towards them.
The baboons behavioural responses to these approaches suggested they viewed researchers as equivalent to a high-level social threat. Researchers were far from being neutral, despite habituation.
More:
https://www.dur.ac.uk/news/newsitem/?id=42167&itemno=42167