The use of tools in the wild by
chimpanzees has been observed and well established for
some time now and in fact recently chimps have also
been observed successfully hunting lemurs with crude
yet self-crafted spears. On the other hand tool use
by gorillas in the wild has been little observed and
certainly not to the same extent or sophistication as
their more rambunctious cousins, the chimpanzee. So
then do these observations lay to rest once and for
all the age old quandary about "which species of ape
is second to man in intelligence"?
PATTERNS OF INTELLIGENCE
It is now recognized that certain regions of the human
brain play a more significant role in the processes
of functional memory, emotional behavior, creative thought,
motor control (movement), planning and decision making
as well as language. The aspect of the brain most closely
associated with such processes is the frontal lobe.
Many of the sophisticated behavioral patterns and attributes
characteristic of humans are believed to originate from
the frontal lobe and in fact this area of the brain
has been identified as the most likely candidate responsible
for species-specific cognitive ability and characteristics.
Bearing this in mind, it is little wonder that researchers
and scientists are eagerly studying anatomical comparisons
of the brains of the great apes (man inclusive) with
particular emphasis on the frontal lobes of the cerebral
hemispheres of the brain.
BRAIN COMPARISONS OF THE GREAT APES
Though it is now understood that simple brain-to-body
size comparisons are woefully inadequate to assess overall
intellectual capability there is still some value in
applying it as a tool of measure or at the very least
as a comparative assessment. When evaluating brain size
data one has to bear in mind that there is significant
sexual dimorphism (variation between females and males)
across several of the great apes; most commonly brain
capacity/size is larger in male specimens than females,
though like humans, the Bonobo chimp (Pan paniscus)
shows little if any size/capacity variation. That said,
although a comparative review of the cranial capacity
of the great apes is not a particularly accurate assessment
of overall intelligence it does have its merits. The
following figures are mean values generated from varying
size samples of both female and male specimens of the
various great apes:
Humans: 1400cc; Gorillas: 500cc; Chimpanzee: 405cc;
Orangutan: 355; Gibbons: 104cc.
From these figures you can see that the brain volume
of the human being is almost 3x the size of the nearest
contender, the gorilla. With regards to those figures
what is of particular note is that the cranial capacity
of the gorilla apparently exceeds that of the chimpanzee
yet all observed evidence tends to indicate that the
chimpanzee is more intelligent than the gorilla. Again
this to some extent reaffirms the earlier observation
that brain capacity alone does not fully account for
intellectual ability.
It should also be noted that studies conducted by
different researchers often resulted with fairly different
conclusions notably that the cranial capacity of the
orangutan exceeded that of the chimpanzee; for the other
great apes the cranial capacities were generally the
same across multiple research data. So if overall cranial
capacity is a poor indicator of intelligence what then
could be a better tool of measure so to speak?
INTELLIGENCE AND THE ROLE OF SPECIFIC REGIONS WITHIN
THE BRAIN
As previously mentioned the frontal lobes of the cerebral
hemispheres of the brain are now recognized as the seat
or center responsible for those behavioral characteristics
that distinguish us as human being. It quite logically
follows then that establishing the variations and morphological
differences within the cerebral frontal lobe areas of
gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans and comparing
them to those of the human being is as good a place
as any to best determine which of the great apes is
next to man in intelligence and what particular features
of the human brain (other than overall volume) account
for man's intellectual uniqueness
About the Author
Ba Kiwanuka is the webmaster of http://www.gorillahub.com
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