Sharon Begley
|
Sep 11, 2007 08:08 PM
. . . among chimpanzees, at least.
Although chimps share meat (such as small monkeys) that they have
hunted, mostly to cement alliances, they almost never share the plants
they have foraged. The reason seems to be that hunting is risky and
strenuous, so sharing says to potential allies, "Lookit this monkey I
just killed with my bare hands! I am strong and fit, buddy; wanna join
forces?" Sharing some figs you’ve pulled down from a branch falls a bit
short in the self-advertising department.
Now scientists are reporting the first-ever observation of wild chimpanzees sharing plant food they have raided from farmers’ fields.
And since the lucky recipients of the largesse were sexually-receptive
females living in the troop near the village of Boussou in the west
African Republic of Guinea, one conclusion leaps to the fore: “We
believe the males may be using crop-raids as a way to advertise their
prowess to other group-members, especially the opposite sex,” said
Kimberley Hockings of the University of Stirling, Scotland. “Such
daring behavior certainly seems to be an attractive trait and
possessing a sought-after food item, such as papaya, appears to draw
even more positive attention from the females.”
Adult male chimps raided nearby fields about 22 times a month,
pinching papayas, bananas, oranges, rice, maize, cassava and other
goodies, the scientists reported Tuesday evening in the online journal
PloS ONE. Females and juveniles almost never engaged in agricultural
shop-lifting. At least the males had a guilty conscience about their
theft: before and during the raids, the chimps exhibited classic signs
of nervousness, including a characteristic scratching (OK, if not
guilt, maybe the anxiety reflected worries about being caught by the
farmers). And they always carried their ill-gotten gains back to the
safety of the forest before sharing, the better to escape the wrath of
the farmers.
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