Family Matters Monkey Planet


Family Matters

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You and I belong to an extraordinary family.

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A family of hundreds of bizarre...

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MONKEYS ROAR

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..colourful...

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and characterful animals...

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I don't think I've seen anything quite like this in my whole life.

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..who lead fascinating...

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and dramatic lives

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all over the world.

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We, that is monkeys, lemurs

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and apes, are all primates...

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..and I want to introduce you to this amazing animal family...

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..to meet some relatives you never even knew you had.

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The Democratic Republic of Congo.

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The only place in the world where you can find

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some very special members of our primate family.

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-In the bucket?

-No!

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This little bundle of energy is Bombo and he's a bonobo,

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a rare and very special type of ape.

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Bonobos, along with chimpanzees, are our closest cousins.

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Now, it's not normal for humans to wash bonobos,

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but his story is not a normal one.

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He lost his father, his mother -

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his entire family were killed by hunters and sold as meat.

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Bombo was alone in the world with no family to care for him.

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And family is hugely important.

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It's a defining feature of all primates.

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Yeah, he doesn't like being washed.

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Bombo's future was bleak.

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Thankfully, now Bombo has a second chance.

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Bombo now has a new family and a new start,

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here at Lola Ya Bonobo Sanctuary.

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A family that will give him the best possible chance of survival.

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These wonderful ladies are known as the Mamas

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and they've got the enviable task

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of looking after this boisterous rabble.

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Just like we play with our own babies,

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it's their job to engage and play with the orphans,

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and it's a full-time job.

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MONKEY SQUEALS

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LOUD SQUEALS

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LAUGHTER

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In the wild, physical contact and play

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are a vital preparation for adult life.

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Here, the Mamas are their adopted family,

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teaching them the dos and the don'ts of being a bonobo.

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I've studied animals all my life...

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..but I've never met such a rowdy bunch as this.

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MONKEY SQUEALS

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For us primates, being part of a family is what life's all about.

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It's about security, support and shared goals.

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It's about friends and foes,

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knowing who to trust and who to avoid.

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But living in families isn't always easy.

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Family life is as varied,

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challenging, and rewarding for other primates

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as it is for us.

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Primate families aren't always what you'd expect.

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In the far-flung forests of Peru...

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..lives a secretive little monkey...

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..as small as a squirrel.

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..with a very modern take on childcare.

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This is a female emperor tamarin.

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Scientist have named her RC, short for Radio Collar.

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Tamarins almost always have twins, which is rare in primates.

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And they can be quite a handful.

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But RC has some help.

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It looks like Dad to the rescue.

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This is Purple Beads.

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The beads help scientists know which tamarin is which.

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He's on his way to look after the twins...

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..to take the pressure off RC.

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But this family isn't as straightforward as it first seems.

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This is Red Beads.

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He also seems to want to help out.

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And a third male, No Beads.

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He too wants to lend a hand with the twins.

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All three males take a turn with the twins.

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They make a great team.

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With all this help...

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RC has some time to herself.

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Without the twins slowing her down,

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she's a much better hunter and can feed till her heart's content.

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But how has RC managed to string along all three males?

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She's played a rather cunning trick on them.

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Four months ago, she mated with each of them.

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Now she's had the twins, they're all a little confused.

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No-one seems to know who's the real father.

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But as long as there's a chance it's them,

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they all play their part in raising the twins.

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With the three dads helping out,

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RC has the best chance of raising the twins successfully.

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All primates invest huge amounts of time

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and energy into looking after and raising their babies.

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We care for our young for far longer than most other animals.

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Only with the support of a family can they grow up so slowly.

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Beautiful.

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And you are just adorable.

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This is Drusilla and she's a sifaka

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and she's got her two-month-old son,

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Pilot, with her.

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He's wrapped around her back here.

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We love our children, we want to protect and care for them,

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we'd do anything for them.

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I remember when my Amy was first born,

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I would have fought a bear to save her

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and it's just the same for the rest of the primate family.

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They're equally obsessed with their young.

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Wow.

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The need to protect and care for their young

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shapes primate families...

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and can have surprising consequences.

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THUNDER

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These are rather soggy-looking silvery lutungs

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from Malaysia.

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THUNDER

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Like many primates, their strategy for success

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is to live in large extended families.

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Plenty of hands to guard their territory

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and help raise the next generation.

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But these lutungs have a very special way

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of keeping their offspring safe.

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Their babies are born bright ginger.

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They stick out like a sore thumb.

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Now, you might think it would be better to keep them hidden,

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camouflaged and out of harm's way.

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But standing out in the crowd can have its advantages.

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When danger approaches,

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the whole family can instantly spot the baby and protect it.

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Predators are a constant concern for many primates.

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MONKEY SNARLS

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They're a threat to young and adults alike.

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Living in big groups can mean safety in numbers.

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LOUD SQUEALS

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But that's not always enough.

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The African savannah is a dangerous place to live.

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Out here, many predators would target an unwary monkey.

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They all attack in different ways

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so the monkeys here need different responses

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to avoid being eaten.

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One clever monkey has come up with a system

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to stay one step ahead of the predators.

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I'm hoping I can show you how.

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These guys are vervet monkeys

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and in a minute I'm going to predict

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exactly what they're going to do next.

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All I need is a loudspeaker,

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a length of cable...

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..and one of these.

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In just a moment, they're all going to stand up on their hind legs

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and look very nervous.

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PLAYS MONKEY ALARM CALL

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(Look at that!)

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Well, that was pretty clear.

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They all stood stretched up on hind legs, looked around and ran off.

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They did just what I predicted.

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Once the vervets have regrouped, I'll show you my next trick.

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If it works, they should react in a different way.

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I predict what they're going to do is, in a split-second,

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they're going to run for cover or head up the nearest tree.

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Let's see.

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PLAYS MONKEY ALARM CALL

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-PANICKED SQUEALS

-(Look at that!)

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That was instantaneous.

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They were gone in a fraction of a second and up the nearest tree.

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Exactly as I predicted.

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So, what's actually going on here?

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Well, let me give you a little bit of background.

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Just as we can shout a warning to each other

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about what kind of danger is threatening us...

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..the vervets warn each other exactly what the threat is

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and so, how to react.

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MONKEY CALLS

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SQUEALING

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Vervet monkeys have a number of distinct calls

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in response to different threats.

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Each call prompts a specific response by the rest of the troop.

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That's why I was able to predict

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exactly how they were going to behave earlier.

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The first call was the alarm for snake.

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Instantly, they all knew what the threat was,

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standing bolt upright to try and spot the sneaky serpent.

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The second call was for bird of prey.

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They all dashed for cover.

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(Look at that!)

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Hiding in the densest bushes.

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The best place to avoid a swooping attack.

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Vervets also have alarms for leopard, baboon and even human.

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It's a remarkably sophisticated way of working together

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to protect everyone in the group.

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In West Africa, the same early warning system

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has resulted in an unlikely alliance between two different monkeys.

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These green monkeys, close cousins of the vervets,

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also use alarm calls to warn each other about different threats.

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Watching them from above is a monkey

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from a separate branch of the family, western red colobus.

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The green monkeys hold an unusual attraction for the colobus.

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They have an ulterior motive.

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MONKEY CALLS

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A green monkey calls snake.

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Both monkeys try to spot it, then scatter to safety.

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The red colobus seem to know what the green's alarm call means

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and react in the same way.

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Now it looks like the two have become firm friends.

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With no sign of danger, they're able to sit back

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and enjoy each other's company.

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PLAYFUL CHATTER

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These monkeys take their alarm calls very seriously, and rightly so.

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Being able to understand what your friends are saying

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could one day save your life.

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But there's another more sinister side to all this.

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Living in groups and being able to communicate with each other

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has meant other primates have turned from the hunted to the hunters.

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MONKEY CALLS

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PANICKED SQUEALS

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(This is incredible!)

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Well, I never thought I would witness this.

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I'm standing less than five feet

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from a group of six wild chimpanzees and one infant,

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and they're eating a colobus.

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And they are literally tearing this monkey apart.

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I've never seen anything quite so incredible in my life.

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Chimpanzees live in large and well-organised groups.

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These communities are made up of lots of smaller families,

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all working together for the good of everyone.

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Most of the time, chimpanzees eat leaves and fruit,

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but meat is most highly prized.

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The only way they're able to get

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such a high-value food resource as this

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is by working as a team.

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SQUEALING

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Across Africa, all chimpanzees hunt in a similar way.

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They are planned, calculated attacks,

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where every team member has a role.

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Silence descends.

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The chimps pause, listening for their prey.

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FAINT MONKEY CALL

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The target, a monkey troop with infants.

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ANIMATED MONKEY CALL

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A hunt begins.

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ROARING

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PANICKED SQUEALS

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A hunter climbs directly beneath the prey.

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Others push ahead.

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The monkeys get spooked. They scatter.

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On either side, chimps will block their escape.

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Driving them forward.

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It's a trap.

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They've forced them right into the arms of the most experienced hunter.

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SQUEALING

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It's over, and the chimps have their prize.

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Chimpanzee hunts end in a kill three times more often than lion hunts.

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Only by working as a team can they be so ruthlessly efficient.

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Meat is highly nutritious. An incredibly valuable food.

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By joining forces, the community can provide for each other.

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Giving their young a great start in life.

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Living in families has huge benefits.

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Youngsters are cared for for longer

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and grow up surrounded and protected.

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Primates work together to keep each other safe.

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(Look at that!)

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Or join forces for the good of the group.

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But there's also a downside to living in groups.

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Something every primate has to face.

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And it can make an individual's life a misery.

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Since the '60s, these ingenious monkeys, Japanese macaques,

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have enjoyed the benefits of these natural thermal pools.

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With all this bathing in hot springs,

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these monkeys have become global superstars.

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They're probably the most photographed monkeys in the whole world.

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But it's not the stress-free,

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chilled-out lifestyle it might appear.

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Despite what it seems, it's a tough life being a snow monkey.

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Sure, there's a luxuriant hot tub

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to while away the long, cold, winter days,

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but round every corner, there's another monkey out to ruin your day.

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Not all monkeys are created equal.

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They're born into societies governed by a strict order of rank.

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The haves and the have nots.

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Aristocracy, high class,

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middle class and low class.

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When temperatures drop,

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this exclusive spa can get very overcrowded.

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That's when your place on the social ladder really becomes important.

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When the spa is full to bursting,

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poolside politics become important.

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And that results in low rankers being shown the door.

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Quite literally left out in the cold.

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For this little monkey, there's no guarantee of a place in the warmth.

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SQUEALING

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Whether you're born into high society or the lowest of the low,

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your rank affects every aspect of your life.

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Fortunately, there are ways to change your lot.

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Impress those around you and sneak up the pecking order.

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The first skill to master

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is something for which monkeys are famous.

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PLAYFUL CHATTER

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Everybody knows monkeys love to groom each other.

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And that, in this instance, includes me.

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The practical reason for it

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is to rid each other's fur of tics and lice

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and other parasites, which hopefully,

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they're not finding too many of right now.

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However, the social function,

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how they gain advantage from grooming,

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is actually a lot more interesting.

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Being groomed helps keep you healthy.

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But monkeys do it far more than is strictly necessary.

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They'll take time out just to pamper one another.

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But there's always something in it for the groomer, as well as the groomed.

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Grooming's become a way to win favour,

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to manipulate and influence others.

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A currency exchanged for food,

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tolerance and even for mating.

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It's a way to ease tension, or curry favour with someone important.

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If you're a low ranker, you can groom your way up the ladder.

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Grooming is the oil that lubricates monkey life.

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So, what do you do when grooming isn't really an option?

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MONKEY CHATTER

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A ruined Mayan city in the depths of the Mexican jungle.

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Home to a family of spider monkeys.

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Spider monkeys are South America's ultimate treetop acrobats.

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Their whole body is perfectly evolved for a life in the trees.

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Long gangly legs and arms,

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a metre-long tail that can grip as tight as a fist.

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Their hands are like hooks, with long, curved and strong fingers.

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But no thumbs.

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Their ancestors used to have thumbs, but they got in the way,

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so over generations, they've all but disappeared.

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Now all that remains is a small lump,

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making their hands ideal for charging around the canopy.

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But it's bad news when it comes to grooming.

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Spider monkeys are hopeless at it.

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So instead, they've come up with an endearing alternative.

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Hugging.

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Cuddles, embraces,

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physical contact is their currency.

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Hugging makes friends in high places.

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Wins a chance to play with the babies.

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And eases those tense, awkward moments.

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In small families, physical contact, like hugs and grooming,

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helps make your way in the world.

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It's the glue that binds primate societies together

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and builds relationships.

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But how do you stay in touch when your group is much, much larger?

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The highlands of Ethiopia.

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There is nowhere else on the planet

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where you can see monkeys in such vast numbers.

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MONKEY CHATTER

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These magnificent monkeys are geladas.

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They live in some of the largest groups of any primate.

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Vast herds of up to a thousand at a time.

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Geladas are unique to these mountains.

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SQUEALING

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There are more monkeys per square mile here than anywhere else.

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There are simply too many geladas

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for grooming to keep them all connected.

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To make matters worse, their diet is made up almost entirely from grass.

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And they need to eat a lot.

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Their hands are constantly picking away at the shoots.

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So geladas have come up with a handy,

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or rather, hand-less, alternative.

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MONKEY CHATTER

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To stay in touch, geladas talk to each other.

0:37:000:37:04

They're constantly mumbling and murmuring away.

0:37:080:37:11

So far, scientists have recognised over 30 distinct calls.

0:37:170:37:22

MONKEY CHATTER

0:37:240:37:26

This is the incredible sound of hundreds upon hundreds

0:37:330:37:36

of geladas chatting away.

0:37:360:37:37

MONKEY CHATTER

0:37:370:37:40

It's just an extraordinary noise. So eerily human.

0:37:490:37:53

This constant chitchat helps reaffirm bonds

0:38:070:38:10

and let's everybody know what's happening in the troop.

0:38:100:38:13

Essentially, they're gossiping.

0:38:200:38:22

And as we humans know, that's a very good way to keep up relationships.

0:38:220:38:26

One monkey has the strangest way of all

0:38:360:38:39

to make friends and influence others.

0:38:390:38:42

And it's found surprisingly close to home.

0:38:440:38:47

The Rock of Gibraltar.

0:39:010:39:03

A world-famous landmark with some unexpected residents.

0:39:040:39:08

Barbary macaques.

0:39:120:39:14

About 200 or so live here.

0:39:180:39:21

And technically, they're British.

0:39:260:39:29

The only wild monkeys in all of Europe.

0:39:330:39:36

These are some of the most political monkeys in the world.

0:39:460:39:50

They're constantly making friends.

0:39:540:39:56

Forming alliances.

0:39:590:40:01

Backstabbing.

0:40:030:40:05

And falling out.

0:40:050:40:08

SQUEALING

0:40:080:40:10

There's never a dull moment in a macaque troop.

0:40:160:40:19

So, how can one individual monkey make their mark

0:40:210:40:24

and impress those around them?

0:40:240:40:26

Meet Vincent.

0:40:350:40:37

Vincent's a mid ranker.

0:40:390:40:41

Middle management.

0:40:420:40:45

But he's got ambition. He wants to go places.

0:40:450:40:48

MUSIC: "Chelsea Dagger" by The Fratellis

0:40:510:40:55

This is Aristotle.

0:41:000:41:03

He leads this mob.

0:41:030:41:05

He's the monkey Vincent's out to impress.

0:41:050:41:08

Vincent has got an unusual way to suck up to the boss.

0:41:110:41:15

Vince has stolen a baby from its mother.

0:41:250:41:28

Vincent wants a promotion, and he hopes the baby is the perfect in.

0:41:380:41:43

He shuffles over to Aristotle and offers up the baby.

0:41:470:41:51

Their teeth chatter in an excited frenzy.

0:41:570:42:00

No-one really knows why, but with the baby,

0:42:040:42:07

Vincent can get closer to the boss.

0:42:070:42:09

A chance to bond and prove himself.

0:42:090:42:12

That's just how it works with Barbary macaques.

0:42:190:42:22

Grab a baby...

0:42:240:42:26

..offer it up to the other males...

0:42:280:42:30

..and everyone's happy.

0:42:340:42:35

Except perhaps the baby.

0:42:380:42:40

It might seem a little strange.

0:42:430:42:45

But somehow, it's become their way of working up the pecking order.

0:42:450:42:50

For now, Vince is left holding the baby.

0:42:590:43:02

And it appears childcare is not his forte.

0:43:090:43:13

Perhaps it's time Vince went and found the little one's mum.

0:43:180:43:21

With luck, one day, Vincent will rule the rock.

0:43:250:43:28

It will be him the others are out to impress.

0:43:290:43:32

But that's when his troubles will really begin.

0:43:320:43:35

Once you reach the top of the troop and become the dominant animal,

0:43:420:43:46

the next challenge is to stay at the top.

0:43:460:43:50

One monkey does this through sheer brute force.

0:43:500:43:54

Hamadryas baboons.

0:43:580:44:00

The males are arguably the roughest and most aggressive of all monkeys.

0:44:030:44:08

Found in arid, desolate scrublands of North Africa and Arabia.

0:44:110:44:15

Hamadryas keep harems of anxious females in check

0:44:200:44:24

through regular bouts of violence.

0:44:240:44:26

SQUEALING

0:44:260:44:29

ROARING

0:44:310:44:32

For them, it's a frightening existence.

0:44:370:44:39

For the males, it's simple.

0:44:460:44:48

They want as many females as possible.

0:44:480:44:50

ROARING AND SQUEALING

0:44:530:44:55

So they're always looking to add to their harem.

0:44:570:45:00

The males go on raiding missions to steal wives from others.

0:45:070:45:11

For the females, it pays to stay loyal, even to a violent male.

0:45:180:45:24

They literally hide behind their man as a fight kicks off.

0:45:310:45:35

ROARING AND SQUEALING

0:45:350:45:37

Hamadryas baboons rule with an iron fist.

0:45:500:45:53

But, of course, fighting is dangerous, it takes its toll.

0:45:530:45:57

A much better option is to signal your strength to others

0:45:570:46:00

without having to resort to violence.

0:46:000:46:03

Primate males often look very different to the females.

0:46:090:46:13

And many use visual displays to avoid contact.

0:46:130:46:17

ROARING

0:46:220:46:23

The silverback gorilla.

0:46:230:46:25

Their hair turns grey with age and maturity.

0:46:280:46:31

They're the definition of a dominant male.

0:46:310:46:34

The more vivid the red patch on a gelada's chest,

0:46:380:46:41

the more virile he is.

0:46:410:46:43

The louder a howler monkey can call, the bigger territory he rules.

0:46:470:46:52

Male orangutans display with swellings around their faces,

0:46:530:46:56

called flanges.

0:46:560:46:58

And the brighter a mandrill's nose, the more powerful he is.

0:47:000:47:04

All these different characteristics mean the same thing,

0:47:090:47:12

"I'm the boss, so don't mess with me."

0:47:120:47:16

But there is one display that's hard to take seriously.

0:47:180:47:22

You really can't miss a proboscis monkey's nose.

0:47:280:47:31

It can grow up to 13 centimetres long.

0:47:390:47:42

As a dominant male, you need to protect your family, especially the kids.

0:47:490:47:53

And the males use their large nose to resonate their alarm calls.

0:47:530:47:57

Put simply, the bigger your nose, the louder your call.

0:47:570:48:00

And, as a result, the size of your nose

0:48:000:48:03

also indicates your status, your rank in society.

0:48:030:48:07

What's more, the females seem to like it.

0:48:120:48:14

For them, the bigger the better.

0:48:140:48:17

Making them not just one of the weirdest monkeys,

0:48:190:48:21

but one of strangest-looking animals on the planet.

0:48:210:48:25

In the vast majority of primate families, the males are in charge.

0:48:300:48:34

But sometimes it's the girls who rule the roost.

0:48:350:48:38

A troop of lemurs behind enemy lines.

0:48:480:48:52

They feed nervously.

0:48:530:48:55

They're ring-tailed lemurs, the most female dominant of all primates.

0:49:000:49:05

This is Tsara.

0:49:070:49:09

She's their leader.

0:49:090:49:11

Not only is she responsible for the rest of the troop,

0:49:140:49:17

she's also a mother of twins.

0:49:170:49:19

It's the enemy. They've been caught.

0:49:290:49:31

Tsara leads the retreat

0:49:320:49:34

as they're chased back to the safety of their own territory.

0:49:340:49:36

PANICKED SQUEALS

0:49:390:49:41

They're home.

0:49:430:49:45

Ring-tailed families revolve around the females.

0:49:520:49:55

They run the show and are very firmly in charge.

0:49:580:50:01

Tsara must juggle being a tough boss and a caring mum.

0:50:060:50:10

She also needs to ensure her troop has enough to eat.

0:50:160:50:21

But it's the end of the dry season and food is scarce.

0:50:240:50:28

At this time of year, ring-tails rely on tamarinds,

0:50:300:50:33

a rich fruit that ripens just when everything else is dying off.

0:50:330:50:38

But Tsara's territory has few tamarind trees.

0:50:410:50:44

Once again, she must lead her troop into danger.

0:50:490:50:52

It's a risky mission.

0:50:540:50:56

If caught, the enemy will target the most vulnerable, Tsara's twins.

0:50:560:51:01

They feed while they can.

0:51:070:51:10

Nervously watching.

0:51:100:51:11

Listening.

0:51:130:51:15

PANICKED SQUEALS

0:51:180:51:21

The troop scatter.

0:51:250:51:27

Tsara's singled out and attacked.

0:51:360:51:39

She escapes and this time, her troop fights back.

0:51:480:51:51

The females lead the counterattack.

0:51:590:52:01

Charging into battle, their babies clinging on for dear life.

0:52:030:52:07

PANICKED SQUEALS

0:52:070:52:09

The enemy has overpowered them.

0:52:130:52:15

Tsara and her troop are pushed back again.

0:52:150:52:19

They've lost the battle.

0:52:240:52:26

Hopefully, soon, the rains will come,

0:52:280:52:30

but till then, Tsara will have to risk further raiding missions.

0:52:300:52:34

Whether it's males or females in charge,

0:52:370:52:39

primate society can often be violent.

0:52:390:52:42

But it doesn't have to be like this.

0:52:420:52:44

There is another way.

0:52:460:52:47

BIRDSONG

0:52:550:52:57

There is one member of our family

0:53:080:53:09

that doesn't have the same problems with violence and aggression.

0:53:090:53:13

For them, love, not war, is the name of the game.

0:53:130:53:17

Along with chimpanzees, they just happen to be our closest relative.

0:53:170:53:21

Like little Bombo, these are bonobos.

0:53:250:53:28

Found only here in the forests south of Africa's Congo River.

0:53:340:53:38

They belong to our branch of the family tree.

0:53:410:53:44

Bonobos, chimps and humans

0:53:520:53:54

are more closely related to each other

0:53:540:53:57

than they are to any other ape.

0:53:570:53:59

Bonobos are peaceful, considerate and caring.

0:54:070:54:10

Most fascinating of all

0:54:200:54:22

is the rather unusual way they maintain their bonds.

0:54:220:54:25

Watching bonobos like this, you quickly start to see something.

0:54:430:54:46

And, in fact, it's something it would be very hard to ignore.

0:54:460:54:49

Bonobos have an awful lot of sex.

0:54:500:54:52

Sex for bonobos means so much more than just reproduction.

0:55:000:55:03

It's for forming friendships.

0:55:080:55:10

Making up after a fight.

0:55:110:55:13

Or simply saying hello.

0:55:160:55:17

They're the only primate that uses sex in this way.

0:55:200:55:23

Sex for bonobos is casual, it's quick

0:55:290:55:32

and after a while, it just begins to look like

0:55:320:55:35

any other social interaction,

0:55:350:55:37

like a hug or a handshake.

0:55:370:55:39

But it binds them, it calms them down.

0:55:390:55:42

The intimacy makes it hard to be angry for long.

0:55:420:55:45

Within the troop, there's harmony, not conflict.

0:55:490:55:52

Who's dominant, who's high ranking,

0:56:020:56:04

just doesn't seem as important to a bonobo.

0:56:040:56:08

It's the older females, the matriarchs,

0:56:190:56:22

who everyone looks up to.

0:56:220:56:24

But because of their experience and knowledge

0:56:240:56:27

rather than because of brute force.

0:56:270:56:29

Bonobos are perhaps the ultimate example

0:56:380:56:41

of social harmony in all animals.

0:56:410:56:44

The perfect primate family.

0:56:450:56:47

For me, they prove that being nice to each other

0:56:480:56:52

can make the world a friendlier, happier place.

0:56:520:56:56

Watching bonobos, you can't help but feel the connection.

0:56:590:57:02

It's so obvious how close we are.

0:57:020:57:05

Now, you might think that they could learn from us,

0:57:050:57:08

but the reality, the truth of the matter is

0:57:080:57:10

that we could learn a lot from them.

0:57:100:57:12

Families are at the heart of primate life

0:57:250:57:27

in a way that few other animals can match.

0:57:270:57:30

And managing complex relationships

0:57:330:57:35

has shaped not just our bodies, but also our minds.

0:57:350:57:39

That is incredible.

0:57:400:57:42

It's made us intelligent.

0:57:440:57:45

The bigger your troop, the smarter you need to be

0:57:460:57:49

to keep ahead of the competition.

0:57:490:57:51

There's no doubt that humans are the smartest primates of all,

0:57:530:57:56

but just how clever are the rest of the family?

0:57:560:58:00

In the next programme,

0:58:000:58:02

we'll see just how ingenuous our relatives can be.

0:58:020:58:06

And explore their complex thoughts and emotions.

0:58:090:58:12

Ah! Who's that?

0:58:120:58:14

And I'll be going to school with Dora here.

0:58:190:58:21

Perhaps we humans aren't quite as clever as we think we are.

0:58:210:58:24

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