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April 5, 2025

Revealed: Why monkeys are better at yodeling than humans

Spider monkeys can hit the widest range of octaves while 'yodelling', easily beating humans.
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Spider monkeys can hit the widest range of octaves while 'yodelling', easily beating humans.

Yodelers of the world, you never stood a chance: Monkeys will always be better at yodeling than humans because they have a "cheap trick" hidden in their voice box, scientists revealed Thursday.

When monkeys howl—or yodelers yodel—they rapidly switch back and forth between low and high frequency sounds.

This is in contrast to opera singers, who are trained to precisely control how they gradually move from note to note, in a way that is pleasing to listen to.

Yodelers and monkeys, however, make bigger jumps far more abruptly, creating vocal breaks that sound like Tarzan's yell.

When yodeling, a human might be able to jump an octave, which doubles the frequency.

Monkeys can manage three and half octaves, according to a new study.

A "cheap trick" in their means these monkeys will always beat humans, senior study author Jacob Dunn of the UK's Anglia Ruskin University told AFP.

Both humans and monkeys have a pair of vocal folds in their larynx which vibrate to create sound.

But monkeys have an additional pair of membranes that gives them a far wider pitch range, the international team of researchers discovered.

This is thought to give monkeys, which are social creatures, a more complex way of communicating with each other.

All other , and even ancient human ancestors, appear to have this special tissue, Dunn said.

At some during our evolution, humans seem to have lost these membranes, he added.

But the shame of being inferior yodelers may have been worth the trade-off.

To be able to speak clearly, humans needed a "streamlined" larynx—and these membranes would have gotten in the way, Dunn explained.

"If you put a on the primate larynx" it would struggle to speak intelligibly because of the membranes and other things like air sacs, he said.

For the study, the researchers put sensors on the necks of some monkeys at Bolivia's La Senda Verde Wildlife Sanctuary.

This allowed them to see what was going on in the larynx of black and gold howler monkeys, tufted capuchins, black-capped squirrel monkeys and Peruvian spider monkeys.

The spider monkey was the best yodeler, managing around four octaves, Dunn said.

The researchers also studied the larynges of dead and used computer modeling to analyze the frequencies.

The study was published in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

More information: Christian T. Herbst et al, 'Monkey yodels'—frequency jumps in New World monkey vocalizations greatly surpass human vocal register transitions, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (2025).

Journal information: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B

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Monkeys excel at yodeling due to an anatomical feature in their larynx, which includes an additional pair of membranes that allow them to achieve a wider pitch range, up to three and a half octaves. This feature, absent in humans, enables monkeys to make abrupt vocal jumps, enhancing their communication. Humans lost these membranes during evolution, favoring a streamlined larynx for clearer speech.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.