
-
Slot says Liverpool will only sign right player at right price amid Isak row
-
Walmart expects better sales, earnings as shoppers squeezed by tariffs
-
Malnourished Gaza children facing death without aid, says UN
-
Autopsy rules out 'trauma' in Frenchman livestream death
-
Liverpool's Frimpong out for several weeks with hamstring injury
-
Leverkusen rebuild continues with Bade and Echeverri signings
-
Ghana singer Shatta Wale held in US fraud probe over Lamborghini purchase
-
Wales skipper Callender passed fit for Women's Rugby World Cup opener against Scotland
-
Only goal is to win, says ever-competitive veteran Fraser-Pryce
-
Maresca adamant Fofana 'very happy' at Chelsea
-
Record EU wildfires burnt more than 1 mn hectares in 2025: AFP analysis
-
Hurricane Erin brings coastal flooding to N. Carolina, Virginia
-
EU gets 15% US tariff for cars, fails to secure wine reprieve
-
Russian fuel prices surge after Ukraine hits refineries
-
Maguire feels it will be 'silly' to leave Man Utd now
-
Ukrainian suspect arrested in Italy over Nord Stream blasts
-
England include ex-skipper Knight in Women's World Cup squad as Cross misses out
-
Walmart lifts outlook for sales, earnings despite tariffs
-
UK sees record asylum claims as row brews over housing
-
Swiss international Okafor move to Leeds heralds new EPL record
-
Microsoft re-joins handheld gaming fight against Nintendo's Switch
-
McReight to captain Wallabies against Springboks
-
Taiwanese boxer Lin agrees to gender test for world championships
-
Stocks slip as investors await key Fed speech
-
Hong Kong mogul Jimmy Lai's 'punditry' not criminal: lawyer
-
Bournemouth sign 'proven winner' Adli from Leverkusen
-
Israel pounds Gaza City as military takes first steps in offensive
-
First security guarantees, then Putin summit, Zelensky says
-
Shilton congratulates Brazilian goalkeeper Fabio on breaking record
-
Israel pounds Gaza City after offensive gets green light
-
Fraser-Pryce seeks Brussels boost ahead of Tokyo worlds
-
Asian markets mixed as investors await key speech
-
Ten hurt, 90 arrested as match abandoned following fan violence in Argentina
-
Indian heritage restorers piece together capital's past
-
Australian Rules player suspended for homophobic slur
-
Online behaviour under scrutiny as Russia hunts 'extremists'
-
Malaysia rules out return of F1 over costs
-
German firm gives 'second life' to used EV batteries
-
Wallabies great Will Genia announces retirement at 37
-
South Africa spinner Subrayen cited for suspect bowling action
-
Menendez brothers face parole board seeking freedom after parents murders
-
Weaponising the feed: Inside Kenya's online war against activists
-
Africa could become 'renewable superpower', says Guterres
-
Suspended Thai PM in court for case seeking her ouster
-
Errani, Vavassori retain US Open mixed doubles title in revamped event
-
Surging tourism is polluting Antarctica, scientists warn
-
Ten Hag hoping for fresh start at rebuilding Leverkusen
-
Five players to watch at the Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Suarez fills Messi void as Inter Miami beat Tigres 2-1
-
Asian markets creep up as investors await key speech

Roots rock: Chimpanzees drum to their own signature beats
The drummers puff out their chests, let out a guttural yell, then step up to their kits and furiously pound out their signature beat so that everyone within earshot can tell who is playing.
The drum kit is the giant gnarled root of a tree in the Ugandan rainforest -- and the drummer is a chimpanzee.
A new study published Tuesday found that not only do chimpanzees have their own styles -- some preferring straightforward rock beats while others groove to more freeform jazz -- they can also hide their signature sound if they do not want to reveal their location.
The researchers followed the Waibira chimpanzee group in western Uganda's Budongo Forest, recording the drum sessions of seven male chimps and analysing the intervals between beats.
The chimps mostly use their feet, but also their hands to make the sound, which carries more than a kilometre through the dense rainforest.
The drumming serves as a kind of social media, allowing travelling chimpanzees to communicate with each other, said Vesta Eleuteri, the lead author of the study published in the journal Animal Behaviour.
The PhD student said that after just a few weeks in the rainforest she was able to recognise exactly who was drumming.
"Tristan -- the John Bonham of the forest -- makes very fast drums with many evenly separated beats," she said, referring to the legendarily hard-hitting drummer of rock band Led Zeppelin.
Tristan's drumming "is so fast that you can barely see his hands", Eleuteri said.
- Hiding their style -
But other chimps like Alf or Ila make a more syncopated rhythm using a technique in which both their feet hit a root at almost the same time, said British primatologist Catherine Hobaiter, the study's senior author.
The research team was lead by scientists from Scotland's University of St Andrews, and several of the chimpanzees are named after Scottish single malt whiskies, including Ila -- for Caol Ila -- and fellow chimp Talisker.
Hobaiter, who started the habituation of the Waibira group in 2011, said it long been known that chimpanzees drummed.
"But it wasn't until this study that we understood they're using these signature styles when they're potentially looking for other individuals -- when they're travelling, when they're on their own or in a small group," she told AFP.
The researchers also discovered that the chimps sometimes choose not to drum in their signature beat, to avoid revealing their location or identity.
"They have this wonderful flexibility to express their identity and their style, but also to sometimes keep that hidden," Hobaiter said.
- 'A sense of music' -
While plenty of animals produce sounds we think of as music -- such as birdsong -- the research could open the door to the possibility that chimpanzees enjoy music on a level generally thought to only be possible for humans.
"I do think that chimpanzees, like us, potentially have a sense of rhythmicity, a sense of music, something that touches them on an almost emotional level, in the way that we might have a sense of awe when we hear an amazing drum solo or another kind of dramatic musical sound," Hobaiter said.
Most research on the culture of chimpanzees has looked at their tools or food, she said.
"But if we think about human culture we don't think about the tools we use -- we think about how we dress, the music we listen to," she added.
Next the researchers plan to investigate how neighbouring and far-off communities of chimpanzees drum in their own differing styles.
Hobaiter has already been looking at chimpanzees in Guinea, where there are very few trees to drum in the open savannah.
"We've got early hints that they might be throwing rocks against rocks" to make sound, she said.
"Literal rock music in this case."
O.Bulka--BTB