WASHINGTON, April 13 — Humankind’s two closest primate relatives are often said to embody contrasting sides of our nature: peace-loving bonobos versus violence-prone chimpanzees.
But a new study out yesterday in Current Biology says it’s not that simple. Male bonobos in fact fight each other more often than male chimps do — and the bonobo "bad boys” who have more dust-ups also see greater mating success.
Lead author Maud Mouginot of Boston University told AFP she decided to investigate the question of aggression among bonobos after prior research revealed a "reproductive skew” among males, meaning some fathered far more offspring than others.
"So the question was, if bonobos are not that aggressive, how can they have such a high reproductive skew?” she said.
Researchers had previously attempted to compare aggression between the two species, which share 99.6 per cent of their DNA with each other, but these studies were limited because they used differing methods in the field.
Mouginot and her colleagues focused on three communities at the Kokolopori Bonobo Reserve in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and two chimpanzee communities at Gombe National Park in Tanzania.
They examined male aggression in particular, as it’s often tied to reproductive success. While females themselves are not passive — especially not bonobo females, who generally occupy the highest social ranks within their communities — this warrants separate research, the researchers said.
By tracking the individual behaviour of 12 male bonobos and 14 male chimpanzees over two years, the team was able to compile data on how often each engaged in aggressive interactions, who these encounters involved, and whether there was physical contact such as biting and pushing or simply charging at a rival.
Surprisingly, the researchers discovered that male bonobos exhibited higher levels of aggression than chimpanzees. Specifically, bonobos engaged in 2.8 times as many aggressive encounters and three times as many physical altercations as did their chimpanzee counterparts.
"That’s, I think, the big finding of the paper,” said Mouginot. "And the other thing is, we actually found that more aggressive male bonobos win more copulation with what we call ‘maximally tumescent females,’” meaning females whose genitals have swollen because they are ovulating.
More time with females?
Male bonobos were almost exclusively aggressive against other males, while male chimpanzees were more likely to become aggressive with females.
Both these findings aligned with expectations. Bonobo females are often leaders in their groups and form alliances to stop lone males who may attempt to coerce them sexually, so it makes little sense for males to challenge them.
Conversely, chimpanzees are strongly male-dominant societies, and it’s the males that band together, coercing females into sex or punishing male adversaries that challenge their authority.
The fact that male bonobo disputes are overwhelmingly one-on-one, rather than one-against-many, might explain why they happen more often, said Mouginot, as the stakes are lower. Bonobos have never been reported to kill each other.
Chimpanzee altercations, on the other hand, involve multiple males and can result in fatalities — either within their own group, or in territorial battles against rival groups. The greater costs associated with chimp combat might therefore limit how often it occurs.
As for why "nicer” bonobo males fared worse with females — "it’s possible that those aggressive males can also spend more time with females” by vanquishing rivals, said Mouginot, but this would require further confirmation.
But Mouginot, who now focuses her anthropological work on humans, is sceptical about whether "bad boy” tropes in people — the idea that men who are troublemakers tend to attract more women — map directly onto bonobos.
Female bonobos, she emphasised, wield significant power and won’t hesitate to shut down male aggression when directed at them. But it’s possible they might find it attractive when it is directed at others. — AFP
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