
Another non-human primate has entered the Stone Age ā the fourth type known to have done so. One population of white-faced capuchins living in Panama routinely use stones to smash open nuts and shellfish.
Other nearby populations donāt make use of stone tools, which might suggest that primates ā perhaps including our ancestors ā stumble into the stone age by chance.
Chimpanzees in west Africa, macaques in Thailand and several species of tufted, strongly built capuchin monkeys living in South America use stone tools to access food. Brendan Barrett at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Ancón, Panama, and his colleagues have now discovered that a species of non-tufted, slender-bodied capuchin monkey also uses stone tools.
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The tufted and non-tufted capuchins are estimated to have split from each other about 6.2 million years ago, says Barrett. āThatās a similar divergence time between our lineage and the last common ancestor of chimpanzees and bonobos,ā he says.
In other words, he says, the non-tufted capuchins are the fourth distinct type of non-human primate known to use stone tools on a regular basis.
Welcome to the Stone Age
Itās an exciting discovery, according to both Dorothy Fragaszy at the University of Georgia in Athens and PatrĆcia Izar at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. āIt reinforces our suspicions that we have interesting things to discover about even well-studied species by looking at populations in new places,ā says Fragaszy.
It was in 2004 that Barrettās colleague, independent researcher Alicia IbƔƱez, first noticed that white-faced capuchins in Panamaās Coiba National Park use stone tools. In March 2017 Barrett and his co-workers followed up on the observation, placing camera traps across three maritime islands in the park.
They discovered that male capuchins in one corner of Jicarón island use stone tools to crack open coconuts, crabs and snails. Capuchins elsewhere on JicaroĢn do not use stone tools, and neither do the capuchins on the other islands.

Barrett thinks several factors might have encouraged the JicaroĢn capuchins to experiment with stone tools. There are no ground-based predators on the island, so the monkeys can afford to spend more time on the ground with their attention focused on tool use. There are also relatively few easily accessible sources of food on the island, which makes it worthwhile for the capuchins to use stones to crack open tough nuts and shells.
But that leaves a mystery. Capuchins elsewhere on JicaroĢn and on the other islands experience those conditions too, but they donāt seem to use stone tools. āWe were surprised that this behaviour appears to be geographically localised,ā says Barrett.
There might be a simple explanation, says Michael Haslam at the University of Oxford. āThere must be a strong, perhaps over-riding, element of chance in stone tool adoption in primates,ā he says.
Perhaps it takes a single hyper-intelligent individual to make the leap and begin using stone tools, with others then copying the idea. āGood innovations are pretty rare, but if they are adaptive they can take off,ā says Barrett.
But that still doesnāt really explain why other capuchins living on JicaroĢn donāt use stone tools, he says, because individuals often migrate between groups and so useful innovations should spread. He hopes that closer study of the monkeys in the years ahead will help solve that puzzle.
Reference: biorxiv, DOI:
Article amended on 6 July 2018
We clarified Brendan Barrettās affiliation