• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Female Bonobos Can Elevate Their Status By Teaming Up To Gain Power Over Males

May 6, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Bonobos are what you’d call sexually dimorphic, meaning the females and the males are noticeably different. The males are larger and stronger compared to the females, and yet they’re the ones that will sit and wait in the trees while the females have their fill of a fresh kill. Females also decide who they mate with, and don’t suffer any unwelcome advances.

It’s a disparity between apparent physical strength and social standing that Harvard University’s Martin Surbeck describes as “totally bizarre for an animal like a bonobo.” The males have all the physical ingredients to be the dominant sex, and yet smaller females often come out on top.

Now, new research has found the first empirical evidence to explain why this might be. According to its findings, females are able to maintain dominance by forming alliances with other females. They team up in groups coined “coalitions”, which in 85 percent of observations went around targeting males and forcing them into submission. This shaped the group’s dominance hierarchy, creating a mechanism through which females could behaviorally elevate their status.

“To our knowledge, this is the first evidence that female solidarity can invert the male-biased power structure that is typical of many mammal societies,” said Surbeck in a release, who runs the Kokolopori bonobo research station and is the study’s first author. “It’s exciting to find that females can actively elevate their social status by supporting each other.”

The findings follow an impressive three decades of data collection, encompassing six wild bonobo communities across the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It adds up to 1,786 conflicts between male and female bonobos, 1,099 of which were won by females. Factors contributing to fighting success included strength, having back-up, and resources that other bonobos didn’t have.

Within seconds of an inciting event, such as a male attempting to injure a juvenile, females within a coalition would scream so loud it had the human observers covering their ears. The coalitions then pursue the male, attacking and sometimes killing them in a way that likely leaves a lasting impression on the rest of the community.

This seems particularly surprising among bonobos as adult females within a community are all unrelated to one another because they have to leave the group they’re born into before they hit puberty. So, to find these females forming such deep bonds and cooperating to such a high degree is unexpected in the context that they’re not kin.

There remain many questions about how and why these coalitions form, but the researchers highlight that the discovery also raises interesting questions about our own evolution.

“I’m still puzzled why, of all animals, bonobos were the ones to form female alliances,” added Barbara Fruth of the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, who has led the LuiKotale bonobo research station for 30 years. “We might never know, but it gives me a glimmer of hope that females of our closest living relatives, in our evolutionary line, teamed up to take the reins of power alongside males.”

The study is published in the journal Communications Biology.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Russia moves Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jets to Belarus to patrol borders, Minsk says
  2. French senators to visit Taiwan amid soaring China tensions
  3. The Closest Black Hole To Us Is Not The One In The Center Of Our Galaxy
  4. Pink And White “Pastes” Sealing Ancient Egyptian Cult Worker’s Coffins Analyzed For First Time

Source Link: Female Bonobos Can Elevate Their Status By Teaming Up To Gain Power Over Males

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Have You Seen This Snake? Florida Wants Your Help Finding Rare Species Seen Once In 50 Years
  • Plague Confirmed In Lake Tahoe Area For First Time In 5 Years, California Officials Say
  • Supergiant Star Spotted Blowing Milky Way’s Largest Bubble Of Its Kind, Surprising Astronomers
  • Game Theory Promised To Explain Human Decisions. Did It?
  • Genes, Hormones, And Hairstyling – Here Are Some Causes Of Hair Loss You Might Not Have Heard Of
  • Answer To 30-Year-Old Mystery Code Embedded In The Kryptos CIA Sculpture To Be Sold At Auction
  • Merry Mice: Human Brain Cells Transplanted Into Mice Reduce Anxiety And Depression
  • Asteroid-Bound NASA Mission Snaps Earth-Moon Portrait From 290 Million Kilometers Away
  • Forget State Mammals – Some States Have Official Dinosaurs, And They’re Awesome
  • Female Jumping Spiders Of Two Species Prefer The Sexy Red Males Of One, Leading To Hybridization
  • Why Is It So Difficult To Find New Moons In The Solar System?
  • New “Oxygen-Breathing” Crystal Could Recharge Fuel Cells And More
  • Some Gut Bacteria Cause Insomnia While Others Protect Against It, 400,000-Person Study Argues
  • Neanderthals And Homo Sapiens Got It On 100,000 Years Earlier Than We Thought
  • “Womb Of The Universe”: Native American Tribal Elders Help Archaeologists Decipher Ancient Rock Art In Missouri Cave
  • 16,000-Year-Old Paintings Suggest Prehistoric Humans Risked Their Lives To Enter “Shaman Training Cave”
  • Final Gasps Of A Dying Star Seen Through A Record-Breaking 130 Years Of Data
  • COVID-19 “Vaccine Alternative” Injection Could Be On Fast-Track To Approval From FDA
  • New Jersey Officials Investigate Possible First Locally Acquired Malaria Case Since 1991
  • First-of-Its-Kind Bright Orange Nurse Shark Recorded Off Costa Rica Makes History
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version