Spy Cameras Uncover Shocking Chacma Baboon Behaviours

Durham University

Chacma baboons with collar camera

An ingenious new camera collar has offered researchers from our Anthropology department an unprecedented glimpse into the secret lives of wild baboons in South Africa.

The pioneering devices have captured baboons engaging in surprising behaviours that have never before been documented.

Cameras catch baboons eating antelope poop

Miniature video cameras concealed within collars recorded footage showing baboons carefully selecting and consuming the faeces of antelope species like kudu, impala and duiker.

This unusual eating habit, known as coprophagy, appears to allow baboons to gain vital nutrients when wild fruits and vegetables are scarce in the dry winter months.

This opens up new questions about how baboons exploit different food resources.

Intimate encounters with wildlife

The covert cameras also documented rare close encounters with animals like mongoose, impala and nyala.

These species normally flee at the sight of human observers.

Spurring new research avenues

The research team collaborated with the BBC Natural History Unit to develop the camera collar prototype for the documentary series 'Animals with Cameras'.

The researchers believe the collar cameras have vast potential for primate research, including studies of social behaviour, mate selection, attention patterns, and reactions to human presence.

/Durham University Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.