Download - OMSI Science Pub - Bonobos

Transcript
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