February 28, 2017
Gang warfare is not unique to
humans - banded mongooses do it too.
Now researchers from the
University of Exeter have shed light on the causes of the fights - and found
they are most common when females
are receptive to breeding and when there is competition over food and
territory.
The scientists, who studied a
population of banded
mongooses in Uganda, observed ferocious fighting between groups that often
led to serious injury and even death.
During the conflicts, they saw
individuals raiding dens and killing the pups of their neighbours, and males
and females of rival groups
mating with each other.
"These fights are very
chaotic, with 20 or 30 mongooses on each side arranged in battle lines,"
said lead author Dr Faye Thompson, of the Centre for Ecology and Conservation
on the University of Exeter's Penryn Campus in Cornwall.
"They all rush forward and
fighting breaks out, with some individuals chasing each other into bushes - but
at the same time males and females from opposing groups will sometimes mate
with each other.
"The fighting is costly to
both individuals and groups. Individuals are more likely to die and litters are
less likely to survive to emergence if their group is involved in an aggressive
encounter with a rival."
Intriguingly, they discovered
that pregnant females were less likely to lose their litters after such
conflicts.
Dr Thompson added: "We found
that females were significantly less likely to abort their litter if their
group was involved in a fight with another group during gestation.
"This is a puzzling result,
but one possible explanation is that unborn litters may be seen as particularly
valuable during periods of conflict with rival groups.
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