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Science

Study: Chimpanzees Have Evolved To Kill Each Other 224

sciencehabit writes A major new study of warfare in chimpanzees finds that lethal aggression can be evolutionarily beneficial in that species, rewarding the winners with food, mates, and the opportunity to pass along their genes. The findings run contrary to recent claims that chimps fight only if they are stressed by the impact of nearby human activity—and could help explain the origins of human conflict as well.
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Study: Chimpanzees Have Evolved To Kill Each Other

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  • No surprise (Score:4, Informative)

    by msobkow ( 48369 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @12:28AM (#47942745) Homepage Journal

    Most animals fight for mates. The only reason they don't kill each other is it's tougher for them to be lethal about it. But if a moose could head-butt another moose into oblivion to win a mate, I've no doubt it would do it.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Hell, if I could headbutt another human into oblivion for a mate, I would too. Here's the funny thing folks, humans are animals too! We have all the same urges and evolutionary pressures, we just lucked out enough to have a brain big enough to develop domestic violence, child abuse and random acts of aggression against strangers/the weak (a lot of which can be trace to evolutionary behaviours anyway) to fill the hole that our self abstinence from murder has left. I will be very interested to see how this
      • Re:No surprise (Score:4, Interesting)

        by readin ( 838620 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @12:51AM (#47942837)
        "Hell, if I could headbutt another human into oblivion for a mate, I would too. Here's the funny thing folks, humans are animals too! We have all the same urges and evolutionary pressures,"

        As any male should know who went to high school. What do you think all that bullying was about? Guys were showing their dominance to win females. Those same urges were why it was so hard for the guys being picked on to just shrug it off or ignore it - how can a male shrug off being humiliated in front of potential mates?
        • Re:No surprise (Score:5, Insightful)

          by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @02:44AM (#47943273)

          What about the bullying that goes on in single sex schools?

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • It's dominance, regardless, which can factor into mate selection. If a queen bee expresses a high level of dominance in an all-female environment that dominance will influence the dominated females in mixed-sex environments. While her behavior won't directly influence males it will influence females in such a way that they wouldn't interfer with her selection. Likewise, if she has friend who are still lower her but able the rabble, they will also act in a way to secure the queen's conquest.

            • by PPH ( 736903 )

              Alpha dominance and hierarchy

              Which turns out not to be a great mating strategy. Genetic testing of animal species that live in alpha male/harem social structures has shown that quite a few offspring are fathered by males hanging around the periphery of the group.

              Chimpanzees, bonobos and humans have reproductive strategies and social groupings that make the identification of female estrus and control over their mating at the critical time extremely difficult. So they develop kinship bonds. The children are most probably the offspring o

        • As any male should know who went to high school. What do you think all that bullying was about?

          Homoerotic tendencies?

      • Re:No surprise (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 19, 2014 @03:36AM (#47943417)

        Here's the funny thing folks, humans are animals too!

        As far as anyone can tell humans have a much greater ability to engage in complex planning: to make decisions based on sophisticated predictions of future consequences from an array of different actions. If you're hanging out with your friend in your living room and he has to go to the bathroom, most likely he'll make some initial assessments of his options, gather more information to increase the accuracy of his predictions: "Would you mind if I used your bathroom? Actually, better use the one off the master bedroom the one down the hall isn't flushing very well these days.", and then act on his predictions. On the other hand, if you have a horse over to hang out in your living room then pretty soon you'll be up to your ankles in horse manure.

        We have all the same urges and evolutionary pressures,...

        Except that with our complex planning it's actually easy to satisfy our evolutionary urges without needing to resort to violence. And we're also able to realize that evolution is a natural law like gravity. That having children in order to be evolutionarily successful is like throwing oneself down a flight of stairs in order to be gravitationally successful - that evolution isn't what should happen - it's what does happen.

        ...a brain big enough to develop ... violence ... to fill the hole that our self abstinence from murder has left.

        No. People engage in violence when they're not able to find any other way to satisfy their (evolutionary) needs. Typically, the people who engage in violence are the ones with the brains that are too "small" - which isn't to say that smart people are never backed into a corner where violence is the only option. But most people who use violence do so because they are unable to make good predictions about all the possible actions and consequences available to them.

        • by Kythe ( 4779 )
          I believe you are right when it comes to having an ability to override baser instincts with long-term concerns. However, I do believe humans consistently underestimate how much evolved behaviors play a part in our lives. The most salient example, of course, is the "tabula rasa" belief system that one encounters from time to time (in my experience, particularly among activists who see hypotheses of behaviors having a genetic origin as threatening to attempts to modify those behaviors).

          Some researchers ha
        • Some very smart people engage in violence because they want to or they find it profitable. It's a Soc Sci construct that violence is only a resort of be "forced into a corner".
    • Re:No surprise (Score:5, Interesting)

      by readin ( 838620 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @12:48AM (#47942825)
      You're right. In a one-on-one fight there is some sense in not killing your rival if he's willing to back down so that you don't have to expend extra energy trying to finish him off.

      But when the battle becomes group against group the advantage of mercy is less clear. An enemy left alive has more choices. Rather than accepting that he can't defeat you he may come back with larger numbers. He may jump up and hit you from behind as soon as you turn to battle one of his companions.

      In an environment of tribal warfare, it doesn't make sense to kill your local intra-tribal rival because he's likely to be your ally in the next inter-tribal battle.
      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

        That's tactics, not psychology. During the 2nd world war most soldiers did not want to kill enemy soldiers because they saw them as fellow humans.

        http://www.military-sf.com/Kil... [military-sf.com]

        • That's tactics, not psychology. During the 2nd world war most soldiers did not want to kill enemy soldiers because they saw them as fellow humans.

          That claim keeps getting repeated without any good evidence. Anyone who's actually studied history knows that it's complete bullshit. Human beings have been participating in organized murder and genocide for thousands of years. We have archaeological evidence of mass slaughter on every continent, amongst every major ethnic group. Plus we have evidence of lovely post-death atrocities such as scalping, ritualized slaughter, and even cannibalism; things which only further illustrate how unlikely it is for

          • The idea that soldiers on the battlefield are reluctant to shoot at each other is complete nonsense.

            Actually it's pretty well supported by data. In fact, it's one of the reasons veteran units are so dangerous. Most of the members are actually trying to kill you instead of just shooting in your general direction.

          • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
            Your talking about heated battles, he's talking about long term stalemates. If the rain floods my trench and I have to sit on the side, it would theoretically be the perfect time to pick off some enemy soldiers who are doing the same thing. In reality I'm trying to keep my food from floating away or being eaten by swimming rats and I will wave at that poor human stuck in the same situation as I and basically declare a temporary truce.
          • Actually, I read in Will and Ariel Durant's Story of Civilization that every prehistoric community practice cannibalism. When you fought the neighboring tribe for access to hunting/gathering grounds, there was no need to spare them. You killed them and ate them. You couldn't keep them as slaves because there was nothing for them to do that's helpful to you. You'd have to give them weapons to hunt which would be used against you. It wasn't until the invention of agriculture when you could force people to sta

    • Most animals fight for mates.

      Fighting for mates is always one vs one, winner take all, and yes they are trying to kill their opponent. War as practised by humans and chimps is fundementally different, it is a coordinated social activity most animals simply don't comprehend let alone practice.

      • Re:No surprise (Score:5, Interesting)

        by radtea ( 464814 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @01:32AM (#47943001)

        War as practised by humans and chimps is fundementally different, it is a coordinated social activity most animals simply don't comprehend let alone practice.

        Two words: "kin selection".

        Humans and chimps are social primates. We live in groups that are relatively close to us, genetically, although humans practice exogamy (mating outside their immediate kin group) a lot more aggressively than any of our cousins.

        So to say "fighting for mates is always one vs one" is to say "kin selection does not exist", which it manifestly does.

        War is mate competition carried out by other means. There is no other rational for it (war is always economically irrational, although this is not generally understood because it "just makes sense" to so many people that war is somehow a good idea.)

        No individual of any species ever under any circumstances kills another member of the same species for any reason other than mate competition, either for themselves or for close kin (this is not quite true, but it should be the starting point of any analysis of deadly interpersonal violence.) Killing has zero to do with hunting behaviour--both male and female bonobos hunt, and don't kill each other. Elk are vegetarian, and do kill each other. Only when reproduction is on the line does the risk of being killed in a potentially deadly fight make evolutionary sense, in humans as well as in other species.

        In humans, war creates all kinds of mating opportunities beyond the simple-minded "conquer the enemy and rape their women" scenario. In particular, it creates opportunities on the home front of all kinds, and that is a very fundamental part of its completely irrational appeal.

        • by gtall ( 79522 )

          I guess this explains China lusting after Taiwan.

        • Mate selection is just one reason. Controlling resources is another.

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • From an evolutionary perspective, this is meaningless.

              • by maeka ( 518272 )

                Hardly.

                How is pride anything else than a costly signal that you're virile enough?

                From an evolutionary perspective that would be very meaningful.

                • I take your point, but: the real point here then is giving the appearance of being a high-quality mate. 'Pride' is just a high-level construct of the species, not a fundamental force affecting the success of the genes.

                  One cannot meaningfully use 'pride' as an explanation, when we're discussing behaviour from an evolutionary perspective, any more than one can use love, generosity, angry, or envy: they're all just 'implementation details'.

                  From an evolutionary perspective, we run from danger to maximise our ef

                  • by maeka ( 518272 )

                    How is 'pride' anything more than a word we give to this emotional drive to maintain status?

                    It appears to me that you're nitpicking on the word GPP used for being overly broad, for not digging deep enough, though you dismiss it with a quite broad wave.

          • Controlling resources attracts mates.
        • by maeka ( 518272 )

          War is mate competition carried out by other means. There is no other rational for it (war is always economically irrational, although this is not generally understood because it "just makes sense" to so many people that war is somehow a good idea.)

          You speak in bold assertive tones about studies and ideas (including kin selection) as if they were established truths.

          You claim there is no other rational reason for war, while there is an entire rich field of study on the possible motivations for war amongst hu

          • And, yea, let's get onto that untruth - that war is somehow always economically irrational. Seizing buffer lands, trade routes, ports, or natural resources is hardly irrational.

            And back in the day, slaves. Tired of working you fields? Gather up the men, invade the neighboring tribe and capture their people. Takes you a few days, maybe a week. Now you can sit back and let these people till your fields for the rest of their lives. Slavery is extremely economically advantageous.

        • When food gets scarce, don't some animals kill off and/or eat some of their young?

          • Yes, but some people are so vested in the "for mating" meme that they will extrapolate until it's reached. You cannot mate if you do not survive is true, but the surviving is denominator enough on its own.
        • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
          Only humans would round up all the alpha males and go to an extended war. Meanwhile the 2nd tier males are left alone with the women.
      • by msobkow ( 48369 )

        To be fair, most animals don't allow multiple males to lead the herd/pack/whatever, so it's harder for them to form an attack troupe like humans or chimps do. Yes, there are exceptions, but when those packs encounter another pack it's just as vicious a battle. And they will gang up on a lone intruder as well.

        I don't think humans or chimps are as "special" as a lot of people would like to believe them to be. We're just tool-using animals at the root of it all.

      • Re:No surprise (Score:5, Informative)

        by penguinoid ( 724646 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @01:47AM (#47943057) Homepage Journal

        Fighting for mates is always one vs one, winner take all, and yes they are trying to kill their opponent.

        Not true. In many animals, fights are intentionally non-lethal. Much like a fistfight, when both have knives. But if one unsheathes their claws (or whatever real weapon), then the other will too and they both run the risk of being maimed or killed. This works because the non-lethal dominance competition correlates pretty well with what would happen if they were fighting for real.

  • by Swampash ( 1131503 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @12:37AM (#47942775)

    What a load of PC "humans are the only baddies in the world" bollocks.

    Chimpanzees have a well documented history of intra-group hierarchical violence, violence against females and extra-group murdering raids. This is nothing new. Anthropologists have known this stuff for decades.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 19, 2014 @12:45AM (#47942817)

      What a load of PC "humans are the only baddies in the world" bollocks.

      Chimpanzees have a well documented history of intra-group hierarchical violence, violence against females and extra-group murdering raids. This is nothing new. Anthropologists have known this stuff for decades.

      Dolphins too. Including infanticide of a rival's offspring. Raping of females, its a gang thing too as accomplices restrict the females ability to flee.

    • And lions eat deer and invasive species commit genocide against native species. That's nature. All the hippies need to get over it and come back to reality.
      • "All the hippies need to get over it and come back to reality."

        The reality is that evolution isn't finished. We are possibly evolving into something much greater than what came before. Steven Pinker exhibits that the human race has overall experienced a decline in violence in the recent past. (http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/history-and-the-decline-of-human-violence/)

        Maybe the reality is that the hippies were right.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Or something worse. The decline in violence is due to factors like reduced rewards and likelihood of punishment. Remove those and humans go back to their nature. The hippies were deluded fools. Those of them who have not committed suicide out of depression are now unashamed capitalists.

          • It sounds like you just made that up. What evidence do you base that on?

            The good side of humans is part of our nature as well, and according to the trend it is an increasing part of our nature. Did you even bother to look at the article I linked?

      • When a male lion takes over a pride, they kill the cubs of their predecessor

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Spy Handler ( 822350 )

      What the tree huggers will find even more horrifying than chimp warfare is how lions kill baby lions.

      True story. When the alpha male of a lion pride is challenged by another male lion and loses, the new lion takes over the pride. This happens inevitably as the the former alpha lion ages. Now the new head lion will often KILL all the lion cubs in the pride. Not because he's hungry, but because he doesn't like the fact that the baby lions are not his.

      • by gnupun ( 752725 )

        Not because he's hungry, but because he doesn't like the fact that the baby lions are not his.

        No, he does it so that in the future, when he's no longer strong, and the baby alphas are now alpha, like their papa, are going to do to him what he did to their father. It's simply eliminating (future) competitors so he and his descendants can rule for as long as possible.

        This was quite common when kings ruled around the world -- surprising similarity between kings and lions.

    • by TapeCutter ( 624760 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @01:39AM (#47943037) Journal
      Whom? - A suprising number of well educated people are still unwilling to give Jane Goodall's pioneering work the recognition it deserves. These same people tend to belive animals are little more than automata, some even refuse to belive chimps have a mind of their own.
      • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @06:48AM (#47943943)

        Those kind of people have never been owned by a cat. A brain the size of walnut generates the capacity to play, sulking when ownee admonishes it, buttering up the ownee for treats, etc. And then there is the room and board issue, it turns out most cats have a degree in financial services.

    • by m00sh ( 2538182 )

      What a load of PC "humans are the only baddies in the world" bollocks.

      Chimpanzees have a well documented history of intra-group hierarchical violence, violence against females and extra-group murdering raids. This is nothing new. Anthropologists have known this stuff for decades.

      In Matthew Lieberman's [wikipedia.org] book Social, he has a chapter on this.

      Especially entertaining is what he wrote regarding the bonobos. They are essentially the free love orgy and hippies of the primate world. And, chimps are the violent and brutal ones.

      So, whatever the primates do, there isn't a definite reflection on humans. We all share the fact that society and social connections are the most important things in our lives but it can go in multitude of directions - from hippie to killers.

    • They proved that the aggression wasn't the result of human interference. It is the common talking point from critics.
  • This is a case where new science seems to confirm the common sense that old science was questioning. Of course chimps evolved to fight. They fight for the same reasons human tribes fight - competition for resources (including breeding females as a resource).
  • But that's 72 ugly virgins [cracked.com]

  • by Zanadou ( 1043400 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @01:04AM (#47942897)
    Huh. So, they're more like humans than we first thought.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 19, 2014 @01:07AM (#47942909)

    You see this from the anti-hunting and lunatic PETA crowd. "Humans are the only species that kill for pleasure or kill for reasons other than survival". Bill Maher (PETA member) said it several times last season of his Real Time show. Yet everything from orca whales to monkeys to domestic cats kills for reasons other than day-to-day survival.

    They kill for fun, for the adrenaline rush, for sport, for territory, and sometimes simply out of instinct or curiosity. Cats leave trophies on their owners' back porches. They'll kill birds and mice and even bats and then leave the dead body for their owner to find. Killer whales just slaughter packs of seals for fun. Often times just killing them and not even eating them. Some animals are so naturally deadly like sharks that they cannot help killing something by simply "test" biting an animal to see if its good food. A shark bites a human but realizes the flesh is poor and there are too many bones, so it backs off for good, yet the human is dead because half his stomach and leg were chewed off entirely by the shark.

    • The Cat is bringing you the dead thing to eat. Not his fault if you don't.
      • Many people are of the opinion that they can read animals' minds and motivations. Same thing goes for humans. It's a common problem in Soc Sci and one good reason why it's not really science based.
    • You can probably add wolves to the list. If anyone has watched that classic one man documentary "Alone in the Wilderness", the story of Dick Proenneke who built a cabin in Alaska and lived by himself for most of his adult life, he ran across a pack of wolves that killed a young moose, but didn't eat much of it; they seemed to enjoy terrorizing and bullying the animal for some time too. He said he could never look at wolves the same again.

      Of course, there's an apologist for everything: http://www.wolfs [wolfsongnews.org]
  • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @01:19AM (#47942945)
    I would like to hear somebody explain logically why they think the behavior of other modern non-human species provides more insight into human behavior, than simply studying human behavior directly.
    • First, it is the "origin," not now. It gives us a what-if on human behavior.
      Second, they can watch chimps do things to each other that would be considered an ethical violation if a study let humans act in a similar way.
      Third, humans have been studied a lot, you have to be quite creative to get another ounce out of what is already in the literature. Chimps, not studied as much, so there are more opportunities to learn stuff.

    • by bussdriver ( 620565 ) on Friday September 19, 2014 @02:28AM (#47943211)

      But seriously, primate research is worthwhile on it's own. You can't directly prove connections between us and them; but that is not unlike a huge amount of science which relies upon observation, statistics and expert judgement calls. When they act similar that can be a clue or merely a coincidence but it warrants further investigation. It's a technique that allows for faster probing of the problem space. BESIDES, if you think that observing chimps influences their behavior (as the "skeptics" denier fanatics always claim) just imagine trying to study humans! Humans are way more difficult to study without influencing their behavior thereby tainting the study.

      The biological connection is obvious; any "insights" they do in the research with a biological connection become useful even if at 1st they seem unjustified. The work can be applied in new ways later on if one proves there is no connection.

      As far as pure human nature study by primate research; well, that is based upon theories which may or may not be proven some day in the future. You have the classic old Feud work on "base desires" which think about the primitive instinctive aspects behind the manifestations; his work in this area is the basis for modern propaganda (WW1 and really big after the Nazis used it so well. Today, it controls most consumers.) Following that success, one could approach further from that perspective - making our relation to primates and their more primitive state ideal.

      Ultimately, I think most the work in the area ends up with the search for biological parallels between us. Say that HATE is really just a manifestation of FEAR; can you ever prove such a thing? nope. not in a hard science way; it's all subjective. But if you can study primates you might find more concrete proof with them on a biological level. A Turing machine is a lame computer nothing like your CPU but it's useful to prove things (the difference being that you can concretely prove the CPU is equivalent to the Turing machine and you can't with a chimp since they evolved differently even if they are nearly the same DNA.)

      As far as evolutionary pressures-- the best theory for human brains was we already made it to the top of the food chain being as primitive as chimps and what made the apes of the plains smart was that they had to war against each other for resources. Just like humans have always done; my tribe and me against you and your tribe. Given how we are the most evolved distance running animals on earth, territorial borders are meaningless. Your group isn't going to give up after running down a lion to exhaustion for 20miles simply because you ended out of your usual turf.

    • Because when you try to study a human in it's natural habitat, they act as if they're being studied, whereas animals continue to be themselves in that same scenario. Although I don't think that animal behavior actually explains human behavior.
      • Completely depends on the animal being studied. Many animals behave very differently if they know humans are watching.
    • Humans have a hard time being objective about themselves.
  • In evolution, winners win!

    The world is now a more enlightened place.

A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson

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