Goldstone Lucas G, Sommer Volker, Nurmi Niina, Stephens Colleen, Fruth Barbara
Department of Biology II, Faculty of Biology, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Großhaderner Straße 2, 82152, Planegg-Martinsried, Germany.
Department of Anthropology, University College London, London, UK.
Primates. 2016 Jul;57(3):367-76. doi: 10.1007/s10329-016-0522-6. Epub 2016 Mar 12.
Food transfers are often hypothesised to have played a role in the evolution of cooperation amongst humans. However, they also occur in non-human primates, though no consensus exists regarding their function(s). We document patterns of begging for food and success rates as well as associated factors that may influence them for wild bonobos at LuiKotale, Democratic Republic of Congo. Our data, collected over 1074 observation hours, focus on 260 begging events (outside mother-offspring dyads) of which 37 % were successful. We find no support for the "reciprocity hypothesis"-that food is exchanged for grooming and/or sexual benefits; and only weak support for the "sharing under pressure" hypothesis-that food is transferred as a result of harassment and pays off in terms of nutritional benefits for the beggar. Instead, our data support the "assessing-relationships" hypothesis, according to which beggars gain information about the status of their social relationship with the possessor of a food item. This seems to hold particularly true for the frequent, albeit unsuccessful begging events by young females (newly immigrated or hierarchically non-established) towards adult females, although it can be observed in other dyadic combinations independent of sex and age.
食物转移常常被假设在人类合作的进化过程中发挥了作用。然而,食物转移在非人类灵长类动物中也会发生,不过关于其功能尚无定论。我们记录了刚果民主共和国卢伊科塔莱野生倭黑猩猩的乞食模式、成功率以及可能影响它们的相关因素。我们的数据收集时长超过1074小时,聚焦于260次(母婴二元组之外的)乞食事件,其中37%获得成功。我们没有找到支持“互惠假说”(即食物被用来交换梳理毛发和/或性方面的好处)的证据;对于“压力下分享”假说(即食物转移是骚扰的结果,且对乞食者而言在营养益处方面有所回报)也仅有微弱支持。相反,我们的数据支持“评估关系”假说,据此假说,乞食者能够获取关于其与食物所有者社会关系状态的信息。这对于年轻雌性(新迁入或等级地位未确立)向成年雌性频繁进行的、尽管未成功的乞食事件似乎尤其适用,不过在其他不考虑性别和年龄的二元组合中也能观察到这一现象。