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Why do gorillas beat their chests?

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Answer: Intimidation and communication

Intimidation and communicationCorrect! Acoustic display! Gorillas (males especially) beat chests for: (1) Intimidation—show strength to rivals/predators. (2) Communication—travels through forest (location announcement). (3) Conflict avoidance—display power without fighting. (4) Excitement/stress release. Technique: cupped hands on chest (loud drumming sound). Silverback males do it most. Accompanied by charging display, vocalizations. Size/strength indicator—larger males, louder beats. Can be heard 1km away! Complex social communication—body language + sound. Prevents dangerous fights!

Exercise for arm musclesWrong. Not exercise—territorial and social display. Chest beating demonstrates strength, warns rivals, communicates location to group.

Gorillas beat rhythm for dancingWrong. Gorillas don't dance. Chest beating is intimidation display and acoustic communication—showing strength and announcing presence.

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