These findings may partly explain the relatively low level of inter-community killings observed in this population, as compared to eastern chimpanzees: when both opponent groups interact with all their members being engaged, the odds of imbalance of power are reduced, as well as the opportunities to kill a neighbor at low-risk.Ĭatherine Crockford, another senior author of this study, summarizes: "We are now accumulating compelling evidence that cooperation among non-related individuals, and among males and females, has likely been under selection due to the competition between neighboring groups. "Adult males play a role in territory increase, but territorial maintenance, dominance over neighbors and their repulsion also require females and the rest of the group", adds Sylvain Lemoine. Thus, grouping and socializing patterns in this population likely explain why group size, rather than just the number of males, confer their competitive ability in this population. Both sexes participate to territorial maintenance via border patrols and engage in territorial conflicts with hostile neighbors. In this population, qualified as "bisexually-bonded", males and females of the same community occupy a similar territory, rather than being segregated in their own smaller home-ranges. "The Taï chimpanzees are known to show high levels of gregariousness among males and females, associated with strong social bonds and cooperation between individuals", says Roman Wittig, one of the senior authors of the study and director of the TCP. Larger and safer feeding grounds could then confer advantages to the individuals in term of reproductive success. Advantage for larger groupsĪlthough an increase of the number of adult males was associated with territory increase, larger groups – including females, adolescents and juveniles – gain advantage over smaller communities by accessing to larger territories and by suffering from less neighbor pressure. By compiling more than 20 years of data on four neighboring communities of western chimpanzees from the Taï Chimpanzee Project (TCP), including information on ranging patterns and inter-group encounters, the researchers found that group size better explains the variation in the costs and benefits of between-group competition than the number of adult males. "To unravel the mechanisms by which group competition and dominance acts in social species, we need long-term data on several groups within a population", explains Sylvain Lemoine, first author of a new study exploring these mechanisms in western chimpanzees. Thus, chimpanzee competitive ability in territorial contest, in light to variation of social systems, remains unclear. However, past findings in western chimpanzees from the Taï National Park, in Côte d’Ivoire, already suggested that females play a more important part in territorial behavior than previously thought. This pattern seems to be true in some eastern chimpanzee populations. In chimpanzees, one of our closest living relatives, and one of the most territorial primate species with humans, males are known to actively engage in inter-group conflicts and territorial behavior, while females stay out of this male business. In many social species, including humans, even if large group sizes provide competitive advantages over smaller neighboring groups, the preponderant role of adult males in territoriality has often been put forward, most likely biased by an anthropocentric perspective.
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