Many animals use alarm calls to warn others in their species about a predator. But that does not entirely explain what Adams saw—because the monkeys continued calling even after the entire group became aware of the threat. A more tantalizing possibility is that the monkeys were addressing the cat itself, blowing its cover and warning it to call off the hunt.
The alarm calls proved an effective deterrent, prompting the ocelots to move away from the loudspeaker. When the cats heard the other types of calls, they either stayed still or moved in some random direction—but never as far away as when they heard the alarm ones, the team reported last November in Animal Behaviour. “Our study provides the first experimental evidence to show that wild ambush predators in natural conditions are deterred by prey alarm calls,” Adams says.
Dan Blumstein, a biologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, who was not involved in the study, agrees that the findings suggest these monkeys’ calls serve to warn off the cats. But he wonders, “Are they moving away out of fear of getting attacked by the monkeys? Or are they moving away because they know the game is up?”