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News

Bonobos have violent streak, study says

Wednesday, 15 October 2008
Cosmos Online

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Bonobo

Image makeover: A five year study of bonobos in the Democratic Republic of Congo observed them hunting other primates on at least five occasions.

Credit: Wikimedia

SYDNEY: Unlike the male-dominated society of the chimpanzee, bonobo society – in which females enjoy a higher social status than males – has a 'make-love-not-war' kind of image, but this may be all wrong new observations suggest.

The bonobo (Pan paniscus) formerly known as the pygmy chimpanzee, lives only in the lowland forest south of Africa's river Congo, and, along with the chimp is our closest living relative.

Bonobos are perhaps best known for their promiscuity: sexual acts both within and between the sexes are a common means of greeting, resolving conflicts, or reconciling after conflicts.

Male dominance and bonding

While chimpanzee males frequently band together to hunt and kill monkeys, the more peaceful bonobos were believed to restrict what meat they do eat to forest antelopes, squirrels, and rodents.

But a study published this week in the U.S. journal Current Biology now offers the first direct evidence of wild bonobos hunting and eating the young of other primate species.

"These findings are particularly relevant for the discussion about male dominance and bonding, aggression and hunting – a domain that was thought to separate chimpanzees and bonobos," said study co-author Gottfried Hohmann of the Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig Germany.

In chimpanzees, male-dominance is associated with physical violence, hunting, and meat consumption, said Hohmann. "By inference, the lack of male dominance and physical violence is often used to explain the relative absence of hunting and meat eating in bonobos."

Finger of blame

However, his team's observations now suggest that these violent behaviours may also exist in ape societies that are not dominated by males.

The researchers made the discovery that the free-loving primates hunt and kill other primates while they were studying a bonobo population living in Salonga National Park, in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Although the team had prior anecdotal evidence for monkey hunting by bonobos, it came from indirect studies of faeces samples; one of which contained the digit of a black mangabey. Yet, in the absence of direct observation, it was not entirely clear whether the bonobos had hunted the mangabey themselves or had taken it from another predator.