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SINGAPORE ( AP ) — Male macaque monkeys make up for sex by grooming females , according to a recent written report that suggests the primates may handle sex as a commodity .

" In primate order , train is the underlie fabric of it all , " Dr. Michael Gumert , a primatologist at the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore , said in a telephone set audience Saturday .

a capuchin monkey with a newborn howler monkey clinging to its back

" It ’s a sign of friendly relationship and house , and it ’s also something that can be replace for sexual overhaul , " Gumert said .

Gumert ’s finding , reported in New Scientist last week , resulted from a 20 - calendar month watching of about 50 long - dock macaques in a reserve in Central Kalimantan , Indonesia .

Gumert found after a male person dress a female , the likelihood that she will engage in sexual action with the male person was about three times more than if the preparation had not occurred .

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And as with other commodities , the value of sex is affected by provision and requirement factor : A male person would pass more clip groom a female if there were fewer females in the vicinity .

" And when the female supply is higher , the male person spends less time on neaten … The mating in reality becomes cheaper look on the market , " Gumert say .

Other experts not involve in the study welcomed Gumert ’s research , say it was a major exploit in consistently study the fundamental interaction of organisms in ways in which an exchange of commodity or avail can be keep — a theory known as biological markets .

Chimps sharing fermented fruit in the Cantanhez National Park in Guinea-Bissau, West Africa.

Dr. Peter Hammerstein , a professor at the Institute for Theoretical Biology at Humboldt University in Berlin and Dr. Ronald Noe , a primatologist at the University of Louis - Pasteur in Strasbourg , France , first propose the concept of biological markets in 1994 .

" It is not a rare phenomenon in nature that males have to make some ' mating effort ' in gild to get a female ’s ' permission ' to mate , " Hammerstein said in an audience , equate the effort to a " fee " that the male give .

" The interesting result of Dr. Gumert ’s research on macaque mating is that the mating grocery seems to have an influence on the amount of this fee , " Hammerstein say .

side-by-side images of a baboon and a gorilla

Hammserstein read Gumert ’s findings designate the monkeys are capable of adjust their behavior to " different market condition . "

Gumert completed his fieldwork in February 2005 and first published his findings in the November emergence of " Animal Behaviour , " a scientific monthly journal .

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