OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

59

description

"What's Love Got To Do With It: Sex for Social Bonding in Bonobos" This Science Pub took place at the Mission Theater in Portland, Oregon, on Tuesday, October 25, 2008. It was presented by Dr. Frances White, associate professor in the Anthropology Department at the University of Oregon: http://www.uoregon.edu/~fwhite/

Transcript of OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Page 1: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 2: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 3: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 4: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Bonobos and Chimpanzees(Pan paniscus & Pan troglodytes)

Page 5: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Bonobo: Democratic Republic of the Congo

Page 6: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 7: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 8: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 9: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 10: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 11: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 12: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 13: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 14: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 15: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 16: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 17: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 18: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 19: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 20: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 21: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 22: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 23: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 24: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 25: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 26: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 27: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Following bonobos and…

Page 28: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Guides and trackers

Page 29: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

What bonobos do…

Page 30: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Ecological: Fruits, shoots (THV) and meat

Page 31: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Chimpanzee communities

• Female with offspring in core areas

• Males work together and are dominant to females

• Food patches small and males feed first

• Male relatives defend community and will attack and kill neighbors

• Tool users

Page 32: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Chimpanzees

Page 33: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Bonobos

• Females are highly social

• Males with females not other males

• Food patches never small, females feed first

• Communities are friendly

Page 34: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Minimum spanning polygons

Page 35: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Bonobos can use tools

Page 36: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Termite mounds

• 67 large mounds in 4km x 35m transect

• 36 km2 = 8870 mounds

• 60% with recent termite activity

Page 37: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Lomako Bonobo termite-fishing tools (n=4)?

Page 38: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Termite fishing holes?

Page 39: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Pangolin excavations

Page 40: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Bonobos

• Sex when not ovulating (1 per 6 hours)

• Face to face mating• All possible age & sex

combinations• Innovative

Page 41: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 42: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Females

• Females enter fruit tree

• GG rub = food to come

• Then eat• Making allies

Page 43: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Males• Single male with

group of females• Mother’s help with

rank and access• Fighting for best

time to mate• Alternate

strategies (consortships)

Page 44: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Male v Female

• Females always together

• Males usually alone, tense when together

• Females have power over single male

Page 45: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Bonobo female power

• Males dominant but deferent when feeding

• Females win over males without fighting

• Females control of prized resources (meat)

Page 46: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Love and Sex: evolution of the human mating system

• Large brained, dependent offspring

• Paternal care / meat provisioning

• Paternal certainty• Concealed ovulation• Sex outside of

ovulation for pair-bond

Page 47: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Monogamy

• Infant needs males

• Pair bonding / monogamy

Page 48: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Problems: humans as primates

• Monogamy = sex is rare

• Human ovulation is advertized

• Different marriage patterns

• Modern male hunters and sharing

• Male v female choices

Page 49: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Humans: a woman wants…

Page 50: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Humans

Page 51: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

From bonobos and other primates:

• Sex for friendship, not monogamy

• Sex to reduce male aggression

• Male behavior to get female choice

• Power of allies

Page 52: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

For males: more than one way

Page 53: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Humans vary

Page 54: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos
Page 55: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Bushmeat & orphan trade

Page 56: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Deforestation for agriculture both small and large scale

Page 57: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Conservation Efforts:

• Initiated in 1991 (approx)• Area between Lomako and Yekekora• AWF and ICCN• Gazettement of Faunal Reserve of

Lomako-Yokokala (RFLY)• 3,625 sq km, 10 primate species• 3yrs funding - managed biodiversity

area

Page 58: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Acknowledgements: colleagues, students, funding

sources

Boise FundBonobo Protection

FundConservation

InternationalL.S.B. Leakey

FoundationNational Science

Foundation BNS-8311252, SBR-9600547, BCS-0610233

North Carolina Zoological Society

University of Oregon: Vice President for Research

Page 59: OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos