The experienced anthropologist
that led the study said she was left 'disturbed' by the behaviour
Chimps have been spotted killing
and then eating their former tyrannical leader.
Jill Pruetz, an professor of
anthropology, said that she found it "very difficult and quite gruesome to
watch" the group of chimpanzees kill a member of their own community and
then abuse the animal's dead body.
Professor Pruetz has described
how she saw a group of the animals discover the body of a chimp called
Foudouko, a former leader of the Fongoli community who had since been exiled
for five years and who was probably killed by members of the group. After they
came across the dead body, they abused and ate it for nearly four hours, the
Iowa State University anthropologist described.
Scientists still aren't sure why
the chimps exhibited such strange and disturbing behaviour, and finding out may
help show why few animals apart from humans show such deadly aggression and
help answer questions about why chimps are going extinct. It's likely that
man-made environmental changes have disrupted the chimp's environment and led
them to be upset, and competition for a mate and a power struggle with younger
chimps might also be responsible for his death.
Even the fact that Foudouko was
able to survive in isolation for so long is rare, according to the scientists.
No chimp has been recorded living on their own for so long, and scientists
watched as he trailed the group from a distance and sometimes privately
interacted with his allies.
But the chimp's downfall may have
come from an attempt to make his way "back into the social group",
according to Professor Pruetz. If he was more submissive he may have stood a
chance, but he was probaly killed because of his aggression, they said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!