Bonobo Society: Amicable, Amorous and Run by Females
By NATALIE ANGIER
Nature's
raucous bestiary rarely serves up good role models for human behavior,
unless you happen to work on the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
But there is one creature that stands out from the chest-thumping masses
as an example of amicability, sensitivity and, well, humaneness: a little-known
ape called the bonobo, or, less accurately, the pygmy chimpanzee. Before
bonobos can be fully appreciated, however, two human prejudices must be
overcome. The first is, fellows, the female bonobo is the dominant sex,
though the dominance is so mild and unobnoxious that some researchers view
bonobo society as a matter of "co-dominance," or equality between the sexes.
Fancy that.
The second hurdle is human squeamishness about what in the 80s were called PDAs, or public displays of affection, in this case very graphic ones. Bonobos lubricate the gears of social harmony with sex, in all possible permutations and combinations: males with females, males with males, females with females, and even infants with adults. The sexual acts include intercourse, genital-to-genital rubbing, oral sex, mutual masturbation and even a practice that people once thought they had a patent on: French kissing.
Bonobos use sex to appease, to bond, to make up after a fight, to ease
tensions, to cement alliances. Humans generally wait until after a nice
meal to make love; bonobos do it beorehand, to alleviate the stress and
competitiveness often seen among animals when they encounter a source of
food.
Lest this all sound like a nonstop Caligulean orgy, Dr. Frans de Waal, a primatologist at Emory University in Atlanta who is the author of "Bonobo: The Forgotten Ape," emphasizes otherwise. "Sex is there, it's pervasive, it's critical, and bonobo society would collapse without it," he said in an interview. "But it's not what people think it is. It's not driven by orgasm or seeking release. Nor is it often reproductively driven. Sex for a bonobo is casual, it's quick and once you're used to watching it, it begins to look like any other social interaction." The new book, with photographs by Frans Lanting, will be published in May by the University of California Press. In "Bonobo," de Waal draws upon his own research as well as that of many other primatologists to sketch a portrait of a species much less familiar to most people than are the other great apes -- the gorilla, the orangutan and the so-called common chimpanzee. The bonobo, found in the dense equatorial rain forests of Zaire, was not officially discovered until 1929, long after the other apes had been described in the scientific literature.
Even today there are only about 100 in zoos around the country, compared with the many thousands of chimpanzees in captivity. Bonobos are closely related to chimpanzees, but they have a more graceful and slender build, with smaller heads, slimmer necks, longer legs and less burly upper torsos. When standing or walking upright, bonobos have straighter backs than do the chimpanzees, and so assume a more humanlike posture.
Far more dramatic than their physical differences are their behavioral distinctions. Bonobos are much less aggressive and hot-tempered than are chimpanzees, and are not nearly as prone to physical violence. They are less obsessed with power and status than are their chimpanzee cousins, and more consumed with Eros.
As de Waal puts it in his book, "The chimpanzee resolves sexual issues with power; the bonobo resolves power issues with sex." Or more coyly, chimpanzees are from Mars, bonobos are from Venus. All of which has relevance for understanding the roots of human nature. De Waal seeks to correct the image of humanity's ancestors as invariably chimpanzee-like, driven by aggression, hierarchical machinations, hunting, warfare and male dominance. He points out that bonobos are as genetically close to humans as are chimpanzees, and that both are astonishingly similar to mankind, sharing at least 98 percent of humans' DNA. "The take-home message is, there's more flexibility in our lineage than we thought," de Waal said. "Bonobos are just as close to us as are chimpanzees, so we can't push them aside."
Indeed, humans appear to possess at least some bonobo-like characteristics, particularly the extracurricular use of sex beyond that needed for reproduction, and perhaps a more robust capacity for cooperation than some die-hard social Darwinists might care to admit. One unusual aspect of bonobo society is the ability of females to form strong alliances with other unrelated females. In most primates, the males leave their birthplaces on reaching maturity as a means of avoiding incest, and so the females that form the social core are knit together by kinship. Among bonobos, females disperse at adolescence, and have to insinuate themselves into a group of strangers. They make friends with sexual overtures, and are particularly solicitous of the resident females.
The constructed sisterhood appears to give females a slight edge over resident males, who, though they may be related to one another, do not tend to act as an organized alliance. For example, the females usually have priority when it comes to eating, and they will stick up for one another should the bigger and more muscular male try to act aggressively. Female alliances may have arisen to counter the threat of infanticide by males, which is quite common in other species, including the chimpanzee, but has never been observed among bonobos.
De Waal said that many men grow indignant when they learn of the bonobo's social structure. "After one of my talks, a famous German professor jumped up and said, 'What is wrong with these males?' " he recalled. Yet de Waal said the bonobo males might not have reason to rebel. "They seem to be in a perfectly good situation," he said. "The females have sex with them all the time, and they don't have to fight over it so much among themselves. I'm not sure they've lost anything, except for their dominance."
Bonobo Places of Interest on the Web
Cincinnati Zoo's Bonobo Page http://www.cincyzoo.org/animals/collection/bonobo.html
Bonobo Sex and Society: The behavior of a close relative challenges assumptions about male supremacy in human evolution:http://soong.club.cc.cmu.edu/~julie/bonobos.html
Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center:http://www.emory.edu/WHSC/YERKES/index.html
Source: New York Times (4/22/97
by Frans B. M. de Waal
(Originally published in the March 1995 issue of SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, pp. 82-88)
At a juncture in history during which women are seeking equality with men, science arrives with a belated gift to the feminist movement. Male-biased evolutionary scenarios-- Man the Hunter, Man the Toolmaker and so on--are being challenged by the discovery that females play a central, perhaps even dominant, role in the social life of one of our nearest relatives. In the past few years many strands of knowledge have come together concerning a relatively unknown ape with an unorthodox repertoire of behavior: the bonobo.
The bonobo is one of the last large mammals to be found by science. The creature was discovered in 1929 in a Belgian colonial museum, far from its lush African habitat. A German anatomist, Ernst Schwarz, was scrutinizing a skull that had been ascribed to a juvenile chimpanzee because of its small size, when he realized that it belonged to an adult. Schwarz declared that he had stumbled on a new subspecies of chimpanzee. But soon the animal was assigned the status of an entirely distinct species within the same genus as the chimpanzee, Pan. The bonobo was officially classified as Pan paniscus, or the diminutive Pan. But I believe a different label might have been selected had the discoverers known then what we know now. The old taxonomic name of the chimpanzee, P. satyrus-- which refers to the myth of apes as lustful satyrs--would have been perfect for the bonobo.
The species is best characterized as female-centered and egalitarian
and as one that substitutes sex for aggression. Whereas in most other species
sexual behavior is a fairly distinct category, in the bonobo it is part
and parcel of social relations--and not just between males and females.
Bonobos engage in sex in virtually every partner combination (although
such contact among close family members may be suppressed). And sexual
interactions occur more often among bonobos than among other primates.
Despite the frequency of sex, the bonobo's rate of reproduction in the
wild is about the same as that of the chimpanzee. A female gives birth
to a single infant at intervals of between five and six years. So bonobos
share at least one very important characteristic with our own species,
namely, a partial separation between sex and reproduction.
This finding commands attention because the bonobo shares more than
98 percent of our genetic profile, making it as close to a human as, say,
a fox is to a dog. The split between the human line of ancestry and the
line of the chimpanzee and the bonobo is believed to have occurred a mere
eight million years ago. The subsequent divergence of the chimpanzee and
the bonobo lines came much later, perhaps prompted by the chimpanzee's
need to adapt to relatively open, dry habitats [see "East Side Story: The
Origin of Humankind," by Yves Coppens; SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, May 1994].
In contrast, bonobos probably never left the protection of the trees. Their
present range lies in humid forests south of the Zaire River, where perhaps
fewer than 10,000 bonobos survive. (Given the species' slow rate of reproduction,
the rapid destruction of its tropical habitat and the political instability
of central Africa, there is reason for much concern about its future.)
If this evolutionary scenario of ecological continuity is true, the bonobo may have undergone less transformation than either humans or chimpanzees. It could most closely resemble the common ancestor of all three modern species. Indeed, in the 1930s Harold J. Coolidge--the American anatomist who gave the bonobo its eventual taxonomic status--suggested that the animal might be most similar to the primogenitor, since its anatomy is less specialized than is the chimpanzee's. Bonobo body proportions have been compared with those of the australopithecines, a form of prehuman. When the apes stand or walk upright, they look as if they stepped straight out of an artist's impression of early hominids.
Not too long ago the savanna baboon was regarded as the best living
model of the human ancestor. That primate is adapted to the kinds of ecological
conditions that prehumans may have faced after descending from the trees.
But in the late 1970s, chimpanzees, which are much more closely related
to humans, became the model of choice. Traits that are observed in chimpanzees--including
cooperative hunting, food sharing, tool use, power politics and primitive
warfare--were absent or not as developed in baboons. In the laboratory
the apes have been able to learn sign language and to recognize themselves
in a mirror, a sign of self-awareness not yet demonstrated in monkeys.
Although selecting the chimpanzee as the touchstone of hominid evolution represented a great improvement, at least one aspect of the former model did not need to be revised: male superiority remained the natural state of affairs. In both baboons and chimpanzees, males are conspicuously dominant over females; they reign supremely and often brutally. It is highly unusual for a fully grown male chimpanzee to be dominated by any female.
Enter the bonobo. Despite their common name--the pygmy chimpanzee--bonobos cannot be distinguished from the chimpanzee by size. Adult males of the smallest subspecies of chimpanzee weigh some 43 kilograms (95 pounds) and females 33 kilograms (73 pounds), about the same as bonobos. Although female bonobos are much smaller than the males, they seem to rule.
In physique, a bonobo is as different from a chimpanzee as a Concorde is from a Boeing 747. I do not wish to offend any chimpanzees, but bonobos have more style. The bonobo, with its long legs and small head atop narrow shoulders, has a more gracile build than does a chimpanzee. Bonobo lips are reddish in a black face, the ears small and the nostrils almost as wide as a gorilla's. These primates also have a flatter, more open face with a higher forehead than the chimpanzee's and--to top it all off--an attractive coiffure with long, fine, black hair neatly parted in the middle. Like chimpanzees, female bonobos nurse and carry around their young for up to five years. By the age of seven the offspring reach adolescence. Wild females give birth for the first time at 13 or 14 years of age, becoming full grown by about 15. A bonobo's longevity is unknown, but judging by the chimpanzee it may be older than 40 in the wild and close to 60 in captivity.
Fruit is central to the diets of both wild bonobos and chimpanzees.
The former supplement with more pith from herbaceous plants, and the latter
add meat. Although bonobos do eat invertebrates and occasionally capture
and eat small vertebrates, including mammals, their diet seems to contain
relatively little animal protein. Unlike chimpanzees, they have not been
observed to hunt monkeys. Whereas chimpanzees use a rich array of strategies
to obtain foods--from cracking nuts with stone tools to fishing for ants
and termites with sticks--tool use in wild bonobos seems undeveloped. (Captive
bonobos use tools skillfully.) Apparently as intelligent as chimpanzees,
bonobos have, however, a far more sensitive temperament. During World War
II bombing of Hellabrun, Germany, the bonobos in a nearby zoo all died
of fright from the noise; the chimpanzees were unaffected.
Bonobos are also imaginative in play. I have watched captive bonobos engage in "blindman's buff." A bonobo covers her eyes with a banana leaf or an arm or by sticking two fingers in her eyes. Thus handicapped, she stumbles around on a climbing frame, bumping into others or almost falling. She seems to be imposing a rule on herself: "I cannot look until I lose my balance." Other apes and monkeys also indulge in this game, but I have never seen it performed with such dedication and concentration as by bonobos. Juvenile bonobos are incurably playful and like to make funny faces, sometimes in long solitary pantomimes and at other times while tickling one another. Bonobos are, however, more controlled in expressing their emotions-- whether it be joy, sorrow, excitement or anger--than are the extroverted chimpanzees. Male chimpanzees often engage in spectacular charging displays in which they show off their strength: throwing rocks, breaking branches and uprooting small trees in the process. They keep up these noisy performances for many minutes, during which most other members of the group wisely stay out of their way. Male bonobos, on the other hand, usually limit displays to a brief run while dragging a few branches behind them.
Both primates signal emotions and intentions through facial expressions and hand gestures, many of which are also present in the nonverbal communication of humans. For example, bonobos will beg by stretching out an open hand (or, sometimes, a foot) to a possessor of food and will pout their lips and make whimpering sounds if the effort is unsuccessful. But bonobos make different sounds than chimpanzees do. The renowned low-pitched, extended "huuu- huuu" pant-hooting of the latter contrasts with the rather sharp, high-pitched barking sounds of the bonobo.
My own interest in bonobos came not from an inherent fascination with
their charms but from research on aggressive behavior in primates. I was
particularly intrigued with the aftermath of conflict. After two chimpanzees
have fought, for instance, they may come together for a hug and mouth-to-mouth
kiss. Assuming that such reunions serve to restore peace and harmony, I
labeled them reconciliations.
Any species that combines close bonds with a potential for conflict
needs such conciliatory mechanisms. Thinking how much faster marriages
would break up if people had no way of compensating for hurting each other,
I set out to investigate such mechanisms in several primates, including
bonobos. Although I expected to see peacemaking in these apes, too, I was
little prepared for the form it would take.
For my study, which began in 1983, I chose the San Diego Zoo. At the
time, it housed the world's largest captive bonobo colony--10 members divided
into three groups. I spent entire days in front of the enclosure with a
video camera, which was switched on at feeding time. As soon as a caretaker
approached the enclosure with food, the males would develop erections.
Even before the food was thrown into the area, the bonobos would be inviting
each other for sex: males would invite females, and females would invite
males and other females.
Sex, it turned out, is the key to the social life of the bonobo. The first suggestion that the sexual behavior of bonobos is different had come from observations at European zoos. Wrapping their findings in Latin, primatologists Eduard Tratz and Heinz Heck reported in 1954 that the chimpanzees at Hellabrun mated more canum (like dogs) and bonobos more hominum (like people). In those days, face-to- face copulation was considered uniquely human, a cultural innovation that needed to be taught to preliterate people (hence the term "missionary position"). These early studies, written in German, were ignored by the international scientific establishment. The bonobo's humanlike sexuality needed to be rediscovered in the 1970s before it became accepted as characteristic of the species.
Bonobos become sexually aroused remarkably easily, and they express
this excitement in a variety of mounting positions and genital contacts.
Although chimpanzees virtually never adopt face-to-face positions, bonobos
do so in one out of three copulations in the wild. Furthermore, the frontal
orientation of the bonobo vulva and clitoris strongly suggest that the
female genitalia are adapted for this position.
Another similarity with humans is increased female sexual receptivity.
The tumescent phase of the female's genitals, resulting in a pink swelling
that signals willingness to mate, covers a much longer part of estrus in
bonobos than in chimpanzees. Instead of a few days out of her cycle, the
female bonobo is almost continuously sexually attractive and active.
Perhaps the bonobo's most typical sexual pattern, undocumented in any other primate, is genito-genital rubbing (or GG rubbing) between adult females. One female facing another clings with arms and legs to a partner that, standing on both hands and feet, lifts her off the ground. The two females then rub their genital swellings laterally together, emitting grins and squeals that probably reflect orgasmic experiences. (Laboratory experiments on stump- tailed macaques have demonstrated that women are not the only female primates capable of physiological orgasm.) Male bonobos, too, may engage in pseudocopulation but generally perform a variation. Standing back to back, one male briefly rubs his scrotum against the buttocks of another. They also practice so-called penis-fencing, in which two males hang face to face from a branch while rubbing their erect penises together. The diversity of erotic contacts in bonobos includes sporadic oral sex, massage of another individual's genitals and intense tongue-kissing. Lest this leave the impression of a pathologically oversexed species, I must add, based on hundreds of hours of watching bonobos, that their sexual activity is rather casual and relaxed. It appears to be a completely natural part of their group life. Like people, bonobos engage in sex only occasionally, not continuously. Furthermore, with the average copulation lasting 13 seconds, sexual contact in bonobos is rather quick by human standards.
That sex is connected to feeding, and even appears to make food sharing possible, has been observed not only in zoos but also in the wild. Nancy Thompson-Handler, then at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, saw bonobos in Zaire's Lomako Forest engage in sex after they had entered trees loaded with ripe figs or when one among them had captured a prey animal, such as a small forest duiker. The flurry of sexual contacts would last for five to 10 minutes, after which the apes would settle down to consume the food. One explanation for the sexual activity at feeding time could be that excitement over food translates into sexual arousal. This idea may be partly true. Yet another motivation is probably the real cause: competition. There are two reasons to believe sexual activity is the bonobo's answer to avoiding conflict.
First, anything, not just food, that arouses the interest of more than
one bonobo at a time tends to result in sexual contact. If two bonobos
approach a cardboard box thrown into their enclosure, they will briefly
mount each other before playing with the box. Such situations lead to squabbles
in most other species. But bonobos are quite tolerant, perhaps because
they use sex to divert attention and to diffuse tension. Second, bonobo
sex often occurs in aggressive contexts totally unrelated to food. A jealous
male might chase another away from a female, after which the two males
reunite and engage in scrotal rubbing. Or after a female hits a juvenile,
the latter's mother may lunge at the aggressor, an action that is immediately
followed by genital rubbing between the two adults.
I once observed a young male, Kako, inadvertently blocking an older, female juvenile, Leslie, from moving along a branch. First, Leslie pushed him; Kako, who was not very confident in trees, tightened his grip, grinning nervously. Next Leslie gnawed on one of his hands, presumably to loosen his grasp. Kako uttered a sharp peep and stayed put. Then Leslie rubbed her vulva against his shoulder. This gesture calmed Kako, and he moved along the branch. It seemed that Leslie had been very close to using force but instead had reassured both herself and Kako with sexual contact.
During reconciliations, bonobos use the same sexual repertoire as they do during feeding time. Based on an analysis of many such incidents, my study yielded the first solid evidence for sexual behavior as a mechanism to overcome aggression. Not that this function is absent in other animals--or in humans, for that matter--but the art of sexual reconciliation may well have reached its evolutionary peak in the bonobo. For these animals, sexual behavior is indistinguishable from social behavior. Given its peacemaking and appeasement functions, it is not surprising that sex among bonobos occurs in so many different partner combinations, including between juveniles and adults. The need for peaceful coexistence is obviously not restricted to adult heterosexual pairs.
Apart from maintaining harmony, sex is also involved in creating the
singular social structure of the bonobo. This use of sex becomes clear
when studying bonobos in the wild. Field research on bonobos started only
in the mid-1970s, more than a decade after the most important studies on
wild chimpanzees had been initiated. In terms of continuity and invested
(wo)manpower, the chimpanzee projects of Jane Goodall and Toshisada Nishida,
both in Tanzania, are unparalleled. But bonobo research by Takayoshi Kano
and others of Kyoto University is now two decades under way at Wamba in
Zaire and is beginning to show the same payoffs. Both bonobos and chimpanzees
live in so-called fission- fusion societies. The apes move alone or in
small parties of a few individuals at a time, the composition of which
changes constantly. Several bonobos traveling together in the morning might
meet another group in the forest, whereupon one individual from the first
group wanders off with others from the second group, while those left behind
forage together. All associations, except the one between mother and dependent
offspring, are of a temporary character.
Initially this flexibility baffled investigators, making them wonder if these apes formed any social groups with stable membership. After years of documenting the travels of chimpanzees in the Mahale Mountains, Nishida first reported that they form large communities: all members of one community mix freely in ever changing parties, but members of different communities never gather. Later, Goodall added territoriality to this picture. That is, not only do communities not mix, but males of different chimpanzee communities engage in lethal battles. In both bonobos and chimpanzees, males stay in their natal group, whereas females tend to migrate during adolescence. As a result, the senior males of a chimpanzee or bonobo group have known all junior males since birth, and all junior males have grown up together. Females, on the other hand, transfer to an unfamiliar and often hostile group where they may know no one. A chief difference between chimpanzee and bonobo societies is the way in which young females integrate into their new community.
On arrival in another community, young bonobo females at Wamba single
out one or two senior resident females for special attention, using frequent
GG rubbing and grooming to establish a relation. If the residents reciprocate,
close associations are set up, and the younger female gradually becomes
accepted into the group. After producing her first offspring, the young
female's position becomes more stable and central. Eventually the cycle
repeats with younger immigrants, in turn, seeking a good relation with
the now established female. Sex thus smooths the migrant's entrance into
the community of females, which is much more close-knit in the bonobo than
in the chimpanzee.
Bonobo males remain attached to their mothers all their lives, following them through the forest and being dependent on them for protection in aggressive encounters with other males. As a result, the highest-ranking males of a bonobo community tend to be sons of important females. What a contrast with chimpanzees! Male chimpanzees fight their own battles, often relying on the support of other males. Furthermore, adult male chimpanzees travel together in same-sex parties, grooming each other frequently. Males form a distinct social hierarchy with high levels of both competition and association. Given the need to stick together against males of neighboring communities, their bonding is not surprising: failure to form a united front might result in the loss of lives and territory. The danger of being male is reflected in the adult sex ratio of chimpanzee populations, with considerably fewer males than females.
Serious conflict between bonobo groups has been witnessed in the field,
but it seems quite rare. On the contrary, reports exist of peaceable mingling,
including mutual sex and grooming, between what appear to be different
communities. If intergroup combat is indeed unusual, it may explain the
lower rate of all-male associations. Rather than being male- bonded, bonobo
society gives the impression of being female- bonded, with even adult males
relying on their mothers instead of on other males. No wonder Kano calls
mothers the "core" of bonobo society. The bonding among female bonobos
violates a fairly general rule, outlined by Harvard University anthropologist
Richard W. Wrangham, that the sex that stays in the natal group develops
the strongest mutual bonds. Bonding among male chimpanzees follows naturally
because they remain in the community of their birth. The same is true for
female kinship bonding in Old World monkeys, such as macaques and baboons,
where males are the migratory sex.
Bonobos are unique in that the migratory sex, females, strongly bond
with same-sex strangers later in life. In setting up an artificial sisterhood,
bonobos can be said to be secondarily bonded. (Kinship bonds are said to
be primary.) Although we now know HOW this happens--through the use of
sexual contact and grooming--we do not yet know WHY bonobos and chimpanzees
differ in this respect. The answer may lie in the different ecological
environments of bonobos and chimpanzees--such as the abundance and quality
of food in the forest. But it is uncertain if such explanations will suffice.
Bonobo society is, however, not only female-centered but also appears to
be female-dominated. Bonobo specialists, while long suspecting such a reality,
have been reluctant to make the controversial claim. But in 1992, at the
14th Congress of the International Primatological Society in Strasbourg,
investigators of both captive and wild bonobos presented data that left
little doubt about the issue. Amy R. Parish of the University of California
at Davis reported on food competition in identical groups (one adult male
and two adult females) of chimpanzees and bonobos at the Stuttgart Zoo.
Honey was provided in a "termite hill" from which it could be extracted
by dipping sticks into a small hole. As soon as honey was made available,
the male chimpanzee would make a charging display through the enclosure
and claim everything for himself. Only when his appetite was satisfied
would he let the females fish for honey. In the bonobo group, it was the
females that approached the honey first. After having engaged in some GG
rubbing, they would feed together, taking turns with virtually no competition
between them. The male might make as many charging displays as he wanted;
the females were not intimidated and ignored the commotion. Observers at
the Belgian animal park of Planckendael, which currently has the most naturalistic
bonobo colony, reported similar findings. If a male bonobo tried to harass
a female, all females would band together to chase him off. Because females
appeared more successful in dominating males when they were together than
on their own, their close association and frequent genital rubbing may
represent an alliance. Females may bond so as to outcompete members of
the individually stronger sex.
The fact that they manage to do so not only in captivity is evident
from zoologist Takeshi Furuichi's summary of the relation between the sexes
at Wamba, where bonobos are enticed out of the forest with sugarcane. "Males
usually appeared at the feeding site first, but they surrendered preferred
positions when the females appeared. It seemed that males appeared first
not because they were dominant, but because they had to feed before the
arrival of females," Furuichi reported at Strasbourg. Occasionally, the
role of sex in relation to food is taken one step further, bringing bonobos
very close to humans in their behavior. It has been speculated by anthropologists--
including C. Owen Lovejoy of Kent State University and Helen Fisher of
Rutgers University--that sex is partially separated from reproduction in
our species because it serves to cement mutually profitable relationships
between men and women. The human female's capacity to mate throughout her
cycle and her strong sex drive allow her to exchange sex for male commitment
and paternal care, thus giving rise to the nuclear family.
This arrangement is thought to be favored by natural selection because
it allows women to raise more offspring than they could if they were on
their own. Although bonobos clearly do not establish the exclusive heterosexual
bonds characteristic of our species, their behavior does fit important
elements of this model. A female bonobo shows extended receptivity and
uses sex to obtain a male's favors when--usually because of youth--she
is too low in social status to dominate him. At the San Diego Zoo, I observed
that if Loretta was in a sexually attractive state, she would not hesitate
to approach the adult male, Vernon, if he had food. Presenting herself
to Vernon, she would mate with him and make high- pitched food calls while
taking over his entire bundle of branches and leaves. When Loretta had
no genital swelling, she would wait until Vernon was ready to share. Primatologist
Suehisa Kuroda reports similar exchanges at Wamba: "A young female approached
a male, who was eating sugarcane. They copulated in short order, whereupon
she took one of the two canes held by him and left." Despite such quid
pro quo between the sexes, there are no indications that bonobos form humanlike
nuclear families. The burden of raising offspring appears to rest entirely
on the female's shoulders. In fact, nuclear families are probably incompatible
with the diverse use of sex found in bonobos. If our ancestors started
out with a sex life similar to that of bonobos, the evolution of the family
would have required dramatic change. Human family life implies paternal
investment, which is unlikely to develop unless males can be reasonably
certain that they are caring for their own, not someone else's, offspring.
Bonobo society lacks any such guarantee, but humans protect the integrity
of their family units through all kinds of moral restrictions and taboos.
Thus, although our species is characterized by an extraordinary interest
in sex, there are no societies in which people engage in it at the drop
of a hat (or a cardboard box, as the case may be). A sense of shame and
a desire for domestic privacy are typical human concepts related to the
evolution and cultural bolstering of the family.
Yet no degree of moralizing can make sex disappear from every realm of human life that does not relate to the nuclear family. The bonobo's behavioral peculiarities may help us understand the role of sex and may have serious implications for models of human society. Just imagine that we had never heard of chimpanzees or baboons and had known bonobos first. We would at present most likely believe that early hominids lived in female- centered societies, in which sex served important social functions and in which warfare was rare or absent. In the end, perhaps the most successful reconstruction of our past will be based not on chimpanzees or even on bonobos but on a three-way comparison of chimpanzees, bonobos and humans.
BONOBO
Bonobo communities are peace-loving and generally egalitarian. The strongest social bonds are those among females, although females also bond with males. The status of a male depends on the position of his mother, to whom he remains closely bonded for her entire life.
CHIMPANZEE
In chimpanzee groups the strongest bonds are established between the males in order to hunt and to protect their shared territory. The females live in overlapping home ranges within this territory but are not strongly bonded to other females or to any one male.
GIBBON
Gibbons establish monogamous, egalitarian relations, and one couple will maintain a territory to the exclusion of other pairs.
HUMAN
Human society is the most diverse among the primates. Males unite for cooperative ventures, whereas females also bond with those of their own sex. Monogamy, polygamy and polyandry are all in evidence.
GORILLA
The social organization of gorillas provides a clear example of polygamy. Usually a single male maintains a range for his family unit, which contains several females. The strongest bonds are those between the male and his females.
ORANGUTAN
Orangutans live solitary lives with little bonding in evidence. Male orangutans are intolerant of one another. In his prime, a single male establishes a large territory, within which live several females. Each female has her own, separate home range.
FRANS B. M. de WAAL was trained as an ethologist in the European tradition, receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Utrecht in 1977. After a six-year study of the chimpanzee colony at the Arnhem Zoo, he moved to the U.S. in 1981 to work on other primate species, including bonobos. He is now a research professor at the Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center in Atlanta and professor of psychology at Emory University.
THE PYGMY CHIMPANZEE: EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR. Edited by Randall L. Susman. Plenum Press, 1984.
THE COMMUNICATIVE REPERTOIRE OF CAPTIVE BONOBOS (PAN PANISCUS) COMPARED TO THAT OF CHIMPANZEES. F.B.M. de Waal in "Behaviour," Vol. 106, Nos. 3-4, pages 183-251; September 1988.
PEACEMAKING AMONG PRIMATES. F.B.M. de Waal. Harvard University Press, 1989.
UNDERSTANDING CHIMPANZEES. Edited by Paul Heltne and Linda A. Marquardt. Harvard University Press, 1989.
THE LAST APE: PYGMY CHIMPANZEE BEHAVIOR AND ECOLOGY. Takayoshi Kano. Stanford University Press, 1992.
CHIMPANZEE CULTURES. R. Wrangham, W. C. McGrew, F.B.M. de Waal and P. Heltne. Harvard University Press, 1994.