%0 Journal Article %T Food Calls in Common Marmosets, Callithrix jacchus, and Evidence That One Is Functionally Referential %A Gisela Kaplan %A Leanne Stewart %J Archive of "Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI". %D 2018 %R 10.3390/ani8070099 %X We studied the calls that are made by common marmosets when they see food and when they consume it. They were tested with two types of fruit (banana and blueberries) and two types of insect (live mealworms and crickets). All of these foods elicited Call A, described previously as a food call. Call B was softer and was given more often to crickets. Of particular interest was our discovery of Call C, which was produced when the marmosets discovered insects but not fruit. We showed that Call C has referential meaning, by playing recordings of the call to marmosets when they were eating banana, as follows: on hearing Call C, but not Call A, they stopped eating the banana and went to look in container where they had found insects before. Call C, therefore, has specific meaning, signaling the availability of insect food. All of the calls were produced more frequently when the marmosets were tested alone than when in pairs, indicating that they advertise the availability of food to companions. Call C, at least, is not merely an automatic response reflecting the marmoset¡¯s emotional state. A meaningful call about the discovery of insect food would be essential for survival, since marmosets often forage out of sight of each other. Knowledge of their vocal communication can improve the care of marmosets held in captivity %K food calls %K common marmosets %K food type %K referential %K intentional %K audience effect %K playback experiment %K food preferences %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6070944/