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Living with her family high above the ground, in the northern tropical forests of Colombia, you will find Shakira, a cotton-top tamarin with a penchant for conversation.
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Say, "Hola!"
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Though you may not realize it, this one-pound monkey communicates in a highly sophisticated language of 38 distinct calls based on variations of chirps and whistles.
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The response she just gave is known as a "B chirp," a call often directed at humans.
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To appreciate the complexities of Shakira's language, let's learn a few chirps and whistles, then examine how their combinations form grammatically structured sequences.
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The chirp Shakira used to greet us, comes from a class of calls known as single frequency modulated syllables.
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This class is made up of short duration calls, or chirps, and long duration calls, like screams and squeals.
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Researchers have determined that there are eight different types of chirps categorized by stem upsweep, duration, peak frequency, and frequency change.
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In addition, each chirp has its own unique meaning.
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For example, Shakira's "C chirp" is used when she is approaching food.
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Whereas her "D chirp" is only used when she has the food in hand.
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Single whistles also exhibit a unique intention with each call and just as there are eight different chirps, there are five different whistles.
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Based on frequency modulation, single whistles are subdivided into four categories: squeaks, initially modulated whistles, terminally modulated whistles, and flat whistles.
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The language's quality of unique intention is wonderfully exemplified by the category of initially modulated whistles.
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These whistles change based on the proximity of Shakira to other members of her family.
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If Shakira is greater than 0.6 meters from her family, she'll sound a large initially modulated whistle.
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But if she's less than 0.6 meters from her family, she'll sound a small initially modulated whistle.
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Now that we've learned a few chirps and whistles, Shakira wants to show off by taking you through a quick day in her life with these calls.
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While heading towards a feeding tree for her first meal of the day, she says, (monkey noise), a call most often used in relaxed investigations.
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However, suddenly she spots the shadow of a hawk.
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"E chirp," for alarm.
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This call alerts her family to the presence of this predator, and Shakira jumps to the safety of an inner branch.
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The coast seems clear, so Shakira makes her way towards her dad.
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Wait, wait. Who is that?
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Ah, it's her younger brother, Carlos.
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Cotton-top tamarins often squeal during play wrestling.
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Uh-oh! He's playing a little too roughly, and Shakira screams, alerting her parents to help her.
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Her dad makes his way toward the ball of rolling fur and her brother stops.
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Shakira shakes herself and scratches herself to get the hair on her head back in place.
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Then, Shakira spots another group of unfamiliar tamarins and hears their normal long call.
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She turns to her family.
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Did you catch that?
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First, there was a chirp and then a whistle.
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This is what's known as a combination vocalization, a phrase that contains both a chirp and a whistle.
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These are two calls strung together to convey a message.
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The combination of these two elements alerts her family to the presence of another group, the "F chirp," and the distance they are away, the normal long call whistle.
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In other words, Shakira just said a sentence.
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Her simple demonstration is just the tip of the iceberg.
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She's got trills, chatters, multiple whistle calls, more combination vocalizations, even twitters.
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Yet sadly enough, we may not get to hear everything she has to say.
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Mixed in with chirping sonatas from high above is the constant thud of a machete chopping trees.
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Shakira's habitat in Colombia is being cut down, piece by piece, and if we don't work to protect the critically endangered cotton-top tamarin, it will become extinct in our lifetime.
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If the chirp from one tamarin to the next has proven to be more than just idle chit chat, imagine what else we have left to discover.
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Imagine what else Shakira can tell us.