Rhythm: 'Singing' lemurs in Madagascar have a natural ability to keep a beat just like humans

Daily Mail - Science & tech 

Madagascar's critically endangered'singing' lemurs -- Indri indri -- have a natural ability to keep a beat, just like us humans do, a study has concluded. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics and the University of Turin studied the songs of indri in the rainforests of the island country. They found that the lemurs' strange, wailing songs have the same kinds of universal, categorical rhythms found across human musical cultures. Outside of humans, having rhythm is a rare trait in mammals -- although it can be found elsewhere in the animal kingdom, perhaps most notably in songbirds. Madagascar's critically endangered'singing' lemurs -- Indri indri -- have a natural ability to keep a beat, just like us humans do, a study has concluded.