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Male chimps exchange meat for sex
In western Africa, females mate more with males who offer meat from hunted monkeys, even if it takes a while to close the deal
Web edition : Tuesday, April 7th, 2009
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JUNGLE TRADERAn adult male chimp in western Africa holds the rib cage of a red colobus monkey that he had just hunted and killed. Males such as this often exchange monkey meat for sex with females, a new study finds.Gomes

In the complex arena of chimpanzee sexual politics, ambitious males achieve congress — and lots of it — with a “prey for play” approach. Female chimps in a wild African community mated more frequently with males who, over a 22-month period, shared meat that had been acquired via monkey hunts, report graduate student Cristina Gomes and anthropologist Christophe Boesch, both of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.

Gomes and Boesch’s study, published online April 8 in PLoS ONE, provides a new perspective for why chimps hunt and then share meat.

Researchers have long known that wild chimps — mainly males — occasionally form hunting parties to chase down and kill colobus monkeys and other animals. Hunters eat much, but not all, of the meat obtained in this way.

Anthropologist Craig Stanford, who was not involved in the study, proposed a meat-for-sex hypothesis about 15 years ago. But studies of hunting and meat sharing by chimps have generally lasted a few months, yielding mixed support for a male tendency to give meat to estrous females, whose swollen genital areas signal sexual readiness.

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WHERE’S THE BEEF?Perched in a tree with her infant, an adult female chimp holds in her right hand a piece of monkey meat received a few minutes earlier from a male chimp who had hunted down the primate prey.Gomes

Other studies have suggested that it’s also possible that males give meat to current mating partners. Or hunters may divvy up meat among themselves to forge alliances; hunt only during times of plentiful food, when meat sharing is not a great concern; or covet meat as a dietary supplement that is rarely exchanged.

“Our results strongly suggest that wild chimpanzees exchange meat for sex on a long-term basis,” Gomes says. In the Taï chimp community, located in the western African nation of Côte d’Ivoire, males preferentially shared meat not only with currently estrous females, but also with those who became estrous months later, she notes. In the long run, hunters who shared meat with females doubled their mating success, whereas female recipients increased their caloric intake without having to participate in physically taxing hunts.

“There’s no single explanation for chimp hunting patterns, but this new paper shows that we can’t dismiss a sex-for-meat strategy operating at any chimp study site,” says Stanford, of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. A long-term perspective now appears crucial for understanding how chimps share meat, he says.

“This is one of the most rigorous tests of the hypothesis that chimpanzees trade meat for sex,” remarks Harvard University zoologist Ian Gilby, who studies hunting and meat sharing among chimps in two other African communities.

Gomes and Boesch collected data on meat sharing and mating frequency among Taï chimps between 2003 and 2006. The group studied consisted of 49 individuals, with five adult males and 14 adult females. About 3,000 hours of observation yielded information on 90 successful monkey-hunting expeditions, as well as meat offerings and mating.

Females mated more frequently with hunters who gave them meat at least once, not necessarily those who shared meat on many occasions. Other factors, such as male social rank, also affected male chimps’ mating success and possibly influenced females’ mating decisions, Gomes says.

She and Boesch accounted for possible extra influences on meat sharing by males, including begging for meat by some females at hunt sites and previous instances of mating between specific pairs.

Gilby takes a cautious view of the results. As in other chimp groups, some Taï females may have harassed hunters into sharing — by pulling on carcasses and putting their hands over males’ mouths — and thus become more likely mating partners. The team also excluded lactating females, who don’t mate for several years, possibly muddying the results, Gilby contends.


Found in: Life and Zoology
Comments 4
  • Bring home the bacon and you'll get some fella!

    Not so different from us at all.
    John Toradze John Toradze
    Apr. 8, 2009 at 12:22am
  • Is it possible that the successful male hunters were healthier than their competition? They ate more calories, and importantly more protein, which made them healthier, and this would give them a higher rank. They also share the meat with their male buddies which increases their rank. Sexual selection is based on reproductive fitness. Rank and overall fitness are connected, and indicate better genes, so of course the females are more interested in those males.
    So guys, grabbing that AK47 and slaughtering forest animals will not make you a stud. You have to walk the walk, not just talk the talk.
    James Boettcher James Boettcher
    Apr. 8, 2009 at 2:46am
  • so there even more like us than previously thought. lol
    michael campasini michael campasini
    Apr. 10, 2009 at 4:07pm

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    m9bnat m9bnat2 m9bnat m9bnat2
    Jan. 14, 2010 at 11:08am
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Suggested Reading:
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  • Goodall, J. 1986. The chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University.
  • For more information about Stanford’s work: [Go to]
  • For more information about Boesch’s work: [Go to]
  • For more information about Gilby’s work: [Go to]
Citations & References:
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  • Gomes, C., and C. Boesch. In press. Wild chimpanzees exchange meat for sex on a long-term basis. PLoS ONE. doi:10.1371/journal.pone0005116
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