• Differing diets of bonobo groups may off

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Sep 1 21:30:32 2020
    Differing diets of bonobo groups may offer insights into how culture is created
    New study focuses on neighboring bands of one of our closest relatives


    Date:
    September 1, 2020
    Source:
    Harvard University
    Summary:
    Besides humans, many other social animals are believed to exhibit
    forms of culture in various ways, too. According to primatologists,
    bonobos, one of our closest living relatives, could be the latest
    addition to the list.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Human societies developed food preferences based on a blend of what was available and what the group decided it liked most. Those predilections
    were then passed along as part of the set of socially learned behaviors, values, knowledge, and customs that make up culture. Besides humans,
    many other social animals are believed to exhibit forms of culture in
    various ways, too.


    ==========================================================================
    In fact, according to a new study led by Harvard primatologists Liran
    Samuni and Martin Surbeck, bonobos, one of our closest living relatives,
    could be the latest addition to the list.

    The research, published today in eLife, is the result of a five-year examination of the hunting and feeding habits of two neighboring groups
    of bonobos at the Kokolopori Bonobo Reserve in the Democratic Republic
    of Congo.

    They looked at whether ecological and social factors influence those
    habits.

    Four of those years were spent tracking the neighboring groups of great
    apes using GPS and some old-fashioned leg work to record each time
    they hunted.

    Analyzing the data, the scientists saw many similarities in the
    lives of the two bonobo groups, given the names the Ekalakala and the Kokoalongo. Both roam the same territory, roughly 22 square miles of
    forest. Both wake up and fall asleep in the bird-like nests they build
    after traveling all day. And, most importantly, both have the access and opportunity to hunt the same kind of prey. This, however, is precisely
    where researchers noticed a striking difference.

    The groups consistently preferred to hunt and feast on two different
    types of prey. The Ekalakala group almost always went after a type of squirrel-like rodent called an anomalure that is capable of gliding
    through the air from tree to tree. The Kokoalongo group, on the other
    hand, favored a small to medium- sized antelope called a duiker that
    lives on the forest floor.

    "The idea is that if our closest living relatives, chimpanzees and
    bonobos, both have some cultural traits, then [it's likely] our ancestors already had some capacity for culture." -- Liran Samuni Out of 59 hunts
    between August 2016 and January 2020, the Ekalakala captured and ate 31 anomalure, going after duikers only once. Kokoalongo ate 11 duikers in
    that time and only three gliding rodents.



    ========================================================================== "It's basically like two cultures exploiting a common resource in
    different ways," said Samuni, a postdoctoral fellow in Harvard's
    Pan Lab and the paper's lead author. "Think about two human cultures
    living very close to each other but having different preferences: one preferring chicken more while the other culture is more of a beef-eating culture. ... That's kind of what we see." Using statistical modeling,
    the scientists found this behavior happens independent of factors
    like the location of the hunts, their timing, or the season. They also
    found the preference wasn't influenced by hunting party size or group
    cohesion. In fact, the researchers' model found that the only variable
    that could reliably predict prey preference was whether the hunters were
    team Ekalakala or team Kokoalongo.

    The researchers make clear in the paper that they didn't investigate
    how the bonobo groups learned this hunting preference, but through
    their analysis they were able to rule out ecological factors or genetic differences between the two groups. Basically, it means all evidence
    points toward this being a learned social behavior.

    "It's the same population, and it's neighboring communities," said
    Surbeck, an assistant professor in the Department of Human Evolutionary
    Biology and the paper's senior author. He founded and directs the
    Kokolopori Bonobo Research Project. "These two communities basically
    live in the same exact forest. They use the exact same places, but, nevertheless, they show these differences." The paper amounts to
    what's believed to be the strongest evidence of cultural behavior in
    this primate species.



    ==========================================================================
    The researchers believe this paper is only the tip of the iceberg and
    are already planning the next part of the work: looking at how the bonobo groups learned these behaviors.

    One of the main goals driving this work is helping characterize the
    cultural capabilities of the last common ancestor between humans and
    our two closely related great ape cousins.

    "The idea is that if our closest living relatives, chimpanzees and
    bonobos, both have some cultural traits, then [it's likely] our ancestors already had some capacity for culture," Samuni said.

    Bonobos can play a special role in this mystery. Like chimpanzees,
    which they are often mistaken for, bonobos share 99 percent of their
    DNA with humans.

    Bonobos are often seen as less aggressive and territorial, however,
    favoring sex in various partner combinations over fighting. Chimp
    groups, on the other hand, sometimes battle when they meet in the wild, occasionally to the death.

    Different Bonobo population groups are known to interact and even
    share meals, which along with their socio-sexual behavior has earn them
    the moniker "hippie apes." It's those free love and peace traits that
    make them prime for this type of study since scientists can observe
    two neighboring bonobo groups to distinguish whether a behavior that
    differs between two groups that interact regularly comes about because
    of some sort of a learning mechanism (or social preference) or because
    the environment dictates it, the researchers said.

    The authors of the paper were not much surprised by their findings.

    They had noticed this hunting preference anecdotally, and it's already
    believed that bonobos have subtle cultural traits. After all, a number
    of social animals display cultural behavior, especially when it comes
    to feeding habits. Chimps teach their young to use sticks to fish for
    termites. Dolphin mothers teach offspring to fit marine sponges to their
    noses to protect them as they forage on the seafloor.

    What excites the researchers about this discovery, however, is that it
    shows the value of studying this often-overlooked endangered species
    and diving into its culture.

    "They're like the missing puzzle piece," Surbeck said.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Harvard_University. Original written
    by Juan Siliezar.

    Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Liran Samuni, Franziska Wegdell, Martin Surbeck. Behavioural
    diversity of
    bonobo prey preference as a potential cultural trait. eLife, 2020;
    9 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.59191 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/09/200901142727.htm

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