These apes are helium-breathing operatic sopranos

A team of Japanese researchers have discovered that singing apes use the same vocal techniques as professional human soprano singers.



The above-mentioned research was led by Dr. Takeshi Nishimura from the Primate Research Institute at Kyoto University, Japan, whose team studied the singing of a white-handed gibbon (Hylobates lar) at Fukuchiyama City Zoo, in northern Kyoto.



According to Nishimura, a gibbon’s song is acoustically unique among primates – with a strikingly loud melody which can be heard over two miles away. 

In the wild, gibbons use their songs to communicate with neighboring pairs, strangers and potential mates through impenetrable jungle where visibility is poor.

“The complexity of human speech is unique among primates as it requires varied soft sounds made by the rapid movements of vocal tracts,” said Nishimura. 

”Our speech was thought to have evolved through specific modifications in our vocal anatomy. However, we’ve shown how the gibbons’ distinctive song uses the same vocal mechanics as soprano singers, revealing a fundamental similarity with humans.”

The team conducted its first acoustic investigation on non-human primates using helium gas, which is famous for making human voices appear high pitched by neatly shifting the resonance frequencies of the vocal tract upwards. Of course, the gas is also useful for studying animal vocal mechanisms as it increases sound velocity and resonance frequencies.

The researchers recorded 20 gibbon calls in normal air atmosphere before recording 37 calls in a helium-enriched atmosphere. The resulting sounds revealed how gibbons are capable of consciously manipulating their vocal cords and tract to make their distinctive sound.

“The lowest frequency of harmonics is amplified in a gibbon’s song when performed in normal air,” Nishimura explained. 

”However, in a helium-enriched atmosphere the tuning of the vocal cord vibration and the resonance of the vocal tract are altered as the gas causes an upward shift of the resonance frequencies.”

This supports the theory that, as with humans, there is independence between the origin of the sound and the vocal tools used to manipulate it. 

In addition, the results indicate that gibbons use the same process for producing speech as humans – whereby acoustic sound originates from the larynx and is controlled by a filter, determined by the shape of the supralaryngeal vocal tract. This manipulation forms speech and is known as the ‘source-filter’ process of speech production.

Singing gibbons always, and with minimal effort, adopt the complex vocal techniques which typically mastered in humans by professional soprano singers. This discovery seems to suggest the development of complex vocal abilities in humans was not due to unique evolutionary modifications. 

Instead, it indicates that humans share the biological fundamentals of vocalization with other primates, but in speech have simply acquired another of its most sophisticated forms.

“This is the first evidence that gibbons always sing using soprano techniques, a difficult vocalization ability for humans which is only mastered by professional opera singers,” said Nishimura. 

”This gives us a new appreciation of the evolution of speech in gibbons while revealing that the physiological foundation in human speech is not so unique.”