A “TALKING” orangutan could provide the key to finding out how language evolved from the time of the ancestral great apes.

The research was led by Dr Adriano Lameira, of Durham University, who showed that orangutans could have the ability to control their voices.

He played an imitation “do-as-I-do” game with Rocky, an 11-year-old orangutan, who was able to copy the pitch and tone of sounds made by researchers to make vowel-like calls.

Dr Lameira, who was not a member of Durham University staff at the time of the research but joined the anthropology in 2015, said: “It’s not clear how spoken language evolved from the communication systems of the ancestral great apes.

The Northern Echo: Dr Adriano Lameira Credit: Durham University

Dr Adriano Lameira, who carried out the research. Picture: Durham University

“Instead of learning new sounds, it has been presumed that sounds made by great apes are driven by arousal over which they have no control, but our research proves that orangutans have the potential capacity to control the action of their voices.

“This indicates that the voice control shown by humans could derive from an evolutionary ancestor with similar voice control capacities as those found in orangutans and in all great apes more generally.

“This opens up the potential for us to learn more about the vocal capacities of early hominids that lived before the split between the orangutan and human lineages to see how the vocal system evolved towards full-blown speech in humans.”

The research was carried out in 2012, when Rocky, who lives at Indianapolis Zoo, in the USA, was eight.

During the study, a researcher made random sounds with variations in the tone or pitch of her voice which Rocky then mimicked.

The research team compared these sounds against the largest available database of orangutan calls collected from over 12,000 hours of observations of more than 120 orangutans from 15 wild and captive populations.

They were able to conclude that the sounds made by Rocky were different compared to the sounds on the database, showing that he was able to learn new sounds and control the action of his voice in a “conversational” context.

It might answer the argument about whether or not spoken language stemmed from early human ancestors. Previously it was thought that great apes – our closest relatives – could not learn to produce new sounds and because speech is a learned behaviour it could not have originated from them.

The findings are published today in the journal Scientific Reports.