Skip links

The indri, a critically endangered lemur only found in Madagascar’s rainforest, might hold clues about the human knack for musicality, a Mongabay video explains. Indris (Indri indri) are one of the largest living lemurs, and among the few primates that sing. Researchers studied 15 years’ worth of recorded indri songs, and found that these songs have rhythm, just like human music. In fact, lemur songs seem to have at least two main rhythm patterns similar to many human songs. The first is the 1:1 pattern, such as in the dance club song “I like to move it,” which was used in the animated film Madagascar to introduce a ring-tailed lemur character named King Julien. The second is the 1:2 pattern, such as in the song “We will rock you” by the rock band Queen. Indris don’t just sing solo, but also in duets and in choirs, the researchers reported in a study published last year. Chiara De Gregorio, one of the study’s authors, explains in the video that indris sing for different reasons. They produce so-called advertisement songs when their family wakes up in the morning. They also sing “cohesion songs” to find each other as they move around the forest. Lastly, they have “territorial songs,” which they sing when they encounter another family group, resulting in a “vocal battle.” The Mongabay video explains that the study may contribute to a Darwinian theory called “musical protolanguage hypothesis,” which suggests that music and language may have originated from a prelinguistic communication…This article was originally published on Mongabay

Research

Featured News

Air pollution filters help scientists produce first UK wildlife survey using eDNA

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Social media post led to discovery that samplers measuring toxic particles in air can also

England’s swimming waters five times more likely to be polluted than in EU, research finds

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Experts warn country is in danger of becoming ‘dirty man of Europe’ as it falls

High temperatures threaten to reignite blaze after France’s largest wildfire in decades

Hello August 14, 2025
0

VILLEROUGE LA CREMADE, France (AP) — Firefighters and local authorities remained on high alert Friday

Heat alert for England as temperatures forecast to climb back above 30C

Hello August 14, 2025
0

UK Health Security Agency warns of potential rise in deaths as hot weather sweeps in

Rapidly spreading brush fire prompts evacuations for thousands in California

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Canyon fire in Ventura county, north of Los Angeles, is a ‘very dynamic situation’ and

World lion day: Why is the king of the savanna declining?

Hello August 14, 2025
0

The lion, with its majestic mane and the loudest growl of all the big cats,

Indigenous alliance unveils Brazil’s first Native-led emissions strategy

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Brazil’s largest Indigenous organization has launched the country’s first Native-led strategy to cut greenhouse gas

As Africa pays the price for rich world’s fast fashion fix, new French bill targets brands

Hello August 14, 2025
0

NAIROBI — Mountains of waste stretch as far as the eye can see, smoking in