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黑猩猩(Theropithecus gelada)死亡:对木乃伊婴儿和灵长类动物死亡学的更广泛视角。

Death among geladas (Theropithecus gelada): a broader perspective on mummified infants and primate thanatology.

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, California State University Fullerton, USA.

出版信息

Am J Primatol. 2011 May;73(5):405-9. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20902. Epub 2010 Dec 6.

Abstract

Despite intensive study in humans, responses to dying and death have been a neglected area of research in other social mammals, including nonhuman primates. Two recent reports [Anderson JR, Gillies A, Lock LC. 2010. Pan thanatology. Current Biology 20:R349-R351; Biro D, Humle T, Koops K, Souse C, Hayashi M, Matsuzawa T. 2010. Chimpanzee mothers at Bossou, Guinea carry the mummified remains of their dead infants. Current Biology 20:R351-R352] offered exciting new insights into behavior toward dying and dead conspecifics in our closest living relatives-chimpanzees. Here, we provide a comparative perspective on primate thanatology using observations from a more distant human relative-gelada monkeys (Theropithecus gelada)-and discuss how gelada reactions to dead and dying groupmates differ from those recently reported for chimpanzees. Over a 3.75-year study period, we observed 14 female geladas at Guassa, Ethiopia carrying dead infants from 1 hr to ≥48 days after death. Dead infants were carried by their mothers, other females in their group, and even by females belonging to other groups. Like other primate populations in which extended (>10 days) infant carrying after death has been reported, geladas at Guassa experience an extreme climate for primates, creating conditions which may favor slower rates of decomposition of dead individuals. We also witnessed the events leading up to the deaths of two individuals and the responses by groupmates to these dying individuals. Our results suggest that while chimpanzee mothers are not unique among primates in carrying their dead infants for long periods, seemingly "compassionate" caretaking behavior toward dying groupmates may be unique to chimpanzees among nonhuman primates (though it remains unknown whether such "compassionate" behavior occurs outside captivity).

摘要

尽管人类对临终和死亡的反应进行了深入研究,但其他社会哺乳动物(包括非人类灵长类动物)对临终和死亡的反应一直是一个被忽视的研究领域。最近有两项报告 [Anderson JR、Gillies A、Lock LC. 2010. 全灵长类动物死亡学。当代生物学 20:R349-R351; Biro D、Humle T、Koops K、Souse C、Hayashi M、Matsuzawa T. 2010. 几内亚博苏的黑猩猩母亲携带死去婴儿的木乃伊。当代生物学 20:R351-R352] 为我们最亲近的灵长类亲戚——黑猩猩——对垂死和死亡同类的行为提供了令人兴奋的新见解。在这里,我们使用来自更遥远的人类近亲——狒狒(Theropithecus gelada)——的观察结果,提供了灵长类动物死亡学的比较视角,并讨论了狒狒对死亡和垂死同伴的反应与最近报道的黑猩猩反应有何不同。在一项为期 3.75 年的研究期间,我们观察了埃塞俄比亚瓜萨的 14 只雌性狒狒携带死去婴儿的情况,从死亡后 1 小时到≥48 天不等。死去的婴儿被它们的母亲、群体中的其他雌性以及甚至来自其他群体的雌性携带。与其他报道过死后延长(>10 天)携带婴儿的灵长类动物种群一样,瓜萨的狒狒生活在对灵长类动物来说极端的气候条件下,这可能导致死亡个体的分解速度较慢。我们还目睹了两名个体死亡的事件以及同伴对这些垂死个体的反应。我们的研究结果表明,尽管黑猩猩母亲在长时间携带死去的婴儿方面并非灵长类动物中独一无二的,但对垂死同伴的看似“富有同情心”的照顾行为可能是黑猩猩在非人类灵长类动物中独有的(尽管尚不清楚这种“富有同情心”的行为是否发生在圈养之外)。

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