Anthropology
Related: About this forumSinging Lemurs Share Ancient Musical Heritage with Humans
June 28, 2024
Sam Anderson
If you invented music, maybe you'd look like this, too. An Indri in Mantadia National Park, Madagascar. Photo: David Cook via Flickr
Singing has served as one of the worlds main forms of communication for birds, whales, and of course humans. But a new study shows that at least for one variety of tree-dwelling primate, its the same old song and dance.
One specific type of lemur makes sounds that bear a striking resemblance to human song. Because Madagascan indris use vocal rhythms that sync up with some of our most foundational beats, researchers think they might be the link to the origin of human singing.
Of course, many other animals communicate by singing. But the new study, published in the journal Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, explains how indris use a singular rhythmic pattern called isochrony to transmit alarm signals.
More:
https://explorersweb.com/singing-lemurs-use-music-like-humans/
brush
(57,086 posts)Judi Lynn
(162,290 posts)Thank you.
Celerity
(46,154 posts)Dem2theMax
(10,233 posts)The next time the coyotes start howling, I'm going to go outside and play this, and see what they do!
StarryNite
(10,671 posts)electric_blue68
(17,512 posts)Judi Lynn
(162,290 posts)The cat living with me started meowing immediately after hearing the lemurs starting to sing, in a tone very similar. It was impossible trying to not to think she was responding directly to their communication.