Department of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Insitut de Biologie, Université de Neuchâtel, Rue Emile-Argand 11, 2000, Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
Primates. 2023 Nov;64(6):599-608. doi: 10.1007/s10329-023-01085-6. Epub 2023 Aug 24.
Intercommunity (lethal) aggression is a familiar component of the behavioural repertoire of many forest-dwelling chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) communities. However, until now, the absence of intercommunity attacks - including killings - in communities that live in open, mosaic environments has supported hypotheses of reduced resource competition in drier habitats, and informed referential models of early hominin social dynamics in a similar habitat. In June 2020, we observed the first instance of intercommunity lethal aggression, a male-committed infanticide, by the Issa chimpanzee community, which live in a savannah-mosaic habitat in the Issa Valley, western Tanzania. The carcass was recovered by researchers after it was abandoned by the attackers. Here, we give a detailed account of the events leading up to and including the infanticide, and contextualise our observations with what has been described for other chimpanzee communities. Notably, in contrast to the majority of reported intercommunity infanticides, the infant male victim was castrated (and not cannibalised), making this the youngest reported castration. This observation of intercommunity aggression disproves its hypothesised absence in savannah-dwelling chimpanzees, which by extension, has implications for early hominin evolution. We suggest that the near absence of observations of intercommunity aggression in savannah chimpanzee communities is most likely due to the lack of long-term study communities, and in some cases geographic isolation. We hypothesise that food-rich areas within a habitat with otherwise widely distributed food sources may select for intense intercommunity aggression despite the low population density characteristic of savannah communities. Anecdotes such as this add to the comparative database available on intercommunity killings in chimpanzee society, improving our ability to draw inferences about their evolutionary significance.
社区间(致命)攻击是许多生活在森林中的黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)社区行为组合中常见的一部分。然而,直到现在,生活在开放、镶嵌环境中的社区中缺乏社区间攻击——包括杀戮——这支持了在较干燥栖息地资源竞争减少的假说,并为类似栖息地中早期人类社会动态的参考模型提供了信息。2020 年 6 月,我们观察到伊萨黑猩猩社区发生了首例社区间致命攻击,即雄性实施的杀婴行为,该社区生活在坦桑尼亚西部伊萨谷的热带稀树草原镶嵌环境中。攻击者遗弃尸体后,研究人员将其回收。在这里,我们详细描述了导致杀婴事件发生的一系列事件,并结合其他黑猩猩社区的描述来阐述我们的观察结果。值得注意的是,与大多数报道的社区间杀婴事件不同,被杀害的雄性婴儿被阉割(而不是被吃掉),这是报道的最年轻的阉割案例。这次社区间攻击的观察结果证明了在热带稀树草原生活的黑猩猩中假设的攻击缺失是不正确的,这对早期人类进化有影响。我们认为,在热带稀树草原黑猩猩社区中几乎没有观察到社区间攻击的原因最有可能是缺乏长期研究的社区,在某些情况下是由于地理隔离。我们假设,在一个食物来源广泛分布的栖息地中,食物丰富的区域可能会选择强烈的社区间攻击,尽管热带稀树草原社区的人口密度较低。像这样的轶事增加了关于黑猩猩社会中社区间杀戮的比较数据库,提高了我们推断其进化意义的能力。