Social structures in Pan paniscus: testing the female bonding hypothesis.

Primates

Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Universiteitsplein 1, 2610, Wilrijk, Belgium.

Published: July 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study challenges the idea that bonobos are predominantly a female-bonded species, revealing that female bonding isn't consistent across all captive groups.* -
  • Research showed that in most captive groups, females did not significantly prefer proximity to each other over males, and grooming patterns indicated no higher frequency of interactions between females compared to males.* -
  • While mother-son bonds were stronger, with mothers grooming their sons more frequently, the results highlighted that intersexual relationships (between males and females) are equally or more significant than female-female bonds.*

Article Abstract

Based on previous research in captivity, bonobos, Pan paniscus, have been called a female-bonded species. However, genetic and behavioural data indicate that wild females migrate. Bonding between these unrelated females would then be in contradiction with socio-ecological models. It has been argued that female bonding has been overemphasized in captive bonobos. We examine patterns of proximity, grooming and support behaviour in six well established captive groups of bonobos. We find that female bonding was not a typical characteristic of all captive bonobo groups. In only two groups there was a trend for females to prefer proximity with other females over association with males. We found no evidence that following or grooming between females was more frequent than between males and unrelated females or between males. Only in coalitions, females supported each other more than male-female or male-male dyads. We also investigated five mother-son pairs. Grooming was more frequent among mothers and sons than in any other dyad, but sons did not groom their mothers more than males groomed unrelated females. Mothers groomed their sons, or provided more support to them than females groomed or supported unrelated males. Thus, while bonds between females were clearly present, intersexual relations between males and either unrelated females or their mothers are of more, or equal importance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10329-005-0177-1DOI Listing

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