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Wednesday, September 5, 2007 | Science : Psychiatry and Psychology | print version Print | Comments

Document Bonobo Handshake: What Makes Our Chimp-like Cousins So Cooperative?

by Science Daily

Reposted from:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/09/070903142204.htm

What's it like to work with relatives who think sex is like a handshake, who organise orgies with the neighbours, and firmly believe females should be in charge of everything?

On September 11, researcher Vanessa Woods will journey to Lola ya Bonobo Sanctuary in Congo with colleagues from the Max Planck Institute in Germany to study our mysterious cousin, the bonobo.

'On our last trip, we found that bonobos were better cooperators than chimpanzees because they had sex and played a lot. This time we want to see how much thinking is going on behind the cooperation.'

Bonobos, like chimpanzees, are related to humans by 98.7%. But in contrast to chimpanzees who live in male dominated societies, where infanticide and lethal aggression are observed, bonobos live in highly tolerant and peaceful societies due to female dominance that maintains group cohesion and regulates tensions through sexual behaviour.

'We're always comparing ourselves to chimpanzees, but they're only half the picture. Bonobos and chimpanzees are so opposite in many ways, that we really need to understand bonobos if we're ever going to understand ourselves.'

Apart from cooperation, Woods and her colleagues will be looking at whether bonobos are more helpful than chimpanzees, whether bonobos are more helpful, and whether they like to play ball.

'A lot of our experiments look silly, like when I throw a bright red soccer ball back and forth, or wave a red porcupine around. But a lot of these games help us understand the way bonobos think. Are they as obsessed with objects as we are? Are they scared of new things?'

Working in the Democratic Republic of Congo doesn't always go according to plan.

'Every day there seems to be a new crisis. Last trip we were evacuated from the sanctuary because of gunfire in Kinshasa. Then an orphan bonobo was confiscated from the bush meat trade. He died soon after. It was heart wrenching. But then the bonobos are so funny and fascinating, you go from being devastated one minute to uplifted the next.'

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Max Planck Institute.

For more information about this project and this fascinating primates, go to:
http://www.wasmoethwildlife.org/

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1. Comment #67925 by nickthelight on September 5, 2007 at 7:17 am

 avatarWe may share a common ancestor with these clever tree dwelling fellows but this and our similar DNA structure is where the similarities end. Are they scared of the unknown? surely it is advantageous to be aprehensive, as Dawkins points out in TGD-you don't need to know a Lion will it you in order to run away.

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2. Comment #67943 by Friend Giskard on September 5, 2007 at 9:34 am

 avatar
...like when I...wave a red porcupine around...

Is this another jewish ritual?

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4. Comment #67951 by n0rr1s on September 5, 2007 at 10:42 am

Somebody's going to say it, might as well be me...

What's it like to work with relatives who think sex is like a handshake, who organise orgies with the neighbours


Pretty damn fantastic, I would imagine.

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5. Comment #68046 by neander on September 5, 2007 at 8:44 pm

 avatarHow closely related?
But in contrast to chimpanzees who live in male dominated societies, where infanticide and lethal aggression are observed..

Looks like chimps are closer. Maybe a study to see which religion chimps have!

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6. Comment #68061 by Jesse. on September 6, 2007 at 12:42 am

@Beth:

Weren't bonobos the ones who showed war-like behaviours in stead of chimps? I vaguely remember a theory about a connection between some sexual behaviour characteristic humans and bonobos shared and their mutual capacity to wage war.

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7. Comment #68072 by Duff on September 6, 2007 at 3:09 am

Pan troglodytes (chimpanzee) is the generally more aggressive. Pan paniscus(bonobo/"pygmy chimp") is the one referred to here.

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8. Comment #68085 by scooternyc on September 6, 2007 at 5:00 am

 avatarThis is an article that was written about the bonobo behavior with regard to sexuality and homosexuality, it seemed interesting, especially at dispelling the gay issue to the religious right.

http://www.godsfriends.org/Vol16/No1/natural-gender.html

(3 paragraphs above the 24/30 photo as you scroll down)

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