海角大神

Chimps form friendships based on trust: The banana-sharing test

Trust-based relationships may offer chimpanzees a number of evolutionary benefits, according to new research.

|
Gerald Herbert/AP/File
Two chimps walk together at Chimp Haven in Keithville, La., in 2013.

A new study suggests that chimps, like humans, get by with a little help from their friends.

Over five months, researchers observed 15 chimps living at the Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Kenya. They concluded that , built on trust. 聽The study, led by Jan Engelmann and Esther Herrmann, both of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, appeared Thursday in the journal Current Biology.

鈥淲e were very surprised by our findings since some researchers depict chimpanzee social life as dominated by conflict, competition, and dominance 鈥 whereas our research suggests that chimpanzees are able to form friendships that are based on trust,鈥 Dr. Engelmann says.

To demonstrate their hypothesis, researchers identified 鈥渇riend鈥 and 鈥渘on-friend鈥 pairs based on interactions such as mutual grooming and eating. Then Engelmann and Dr. Herrmann adapted a human trust game for their primate subjects.

In this game, each chimpanzee can either pull a 鈥渢rust rope鈥 or a 鈥渘o-trust rope.鈥 The no-trust rope yields immediate access to food that the chimp doesn't particularly like. But if the chimp pulls the trust rope, a box of high-quality food 鈥 chimpanzee favorites like apples and bananas 鈥 moves to its partner. The partner eats half, but is then faced with a decision. A 鈥渢rustworthy鈥 chimp will send the other half of the food back to its partner, while an 鈥渦ntrustworthy鈥 chimp will keep the food for itself.

鈥淭he no-trust option is safe, but contains low-quality food,鈥 Engelmann says. 鈥淭he trust option, on the other hand, is risky but potentially has high-payoffs. The trust option is [also] risky because the partner might not send the food back, leaving the chimpanzee empty-handed.鈥

Engelmann and colleagues found that while chimpanzees were relatively unwilling to extend trust towards their non-friends, they were significantly more likely to share with friends. So friendship, like many supposedly human concepts, may be deeply rooted in evolutionary history.

鈥淩esearch with other primates, baboons, has shown that friendships entail important evolutionary benefits,鈥 Engelmann says. 鈥淚ndividuals with friends live longer, have more children, and [have] lower stress-levels. I can imagine that the same benefits apply to chimpanzees.鈥

Some non-primates appear to form friendships too. Dolphins and elephants, for example, have been observed maintaining these close social bonds. In these cases, the benefits are likely the same 鈥 increased chances of survival and more offspring.

Scientists are learning more and more that non-parental and non-sexual partnerships are somewhat common in the animal world. But there are still complex behaviors associated with friendship that have yet to be explored in nonhumans.

鈥淲e want to further investigate the similarities between chimpanzee and human friendships,鈥 Engelmann says. 鈥淔or example, do chimpanzees also preferentially help and share with their friends?鈥

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
What is the Monitor difference? Tackling the tough headlines 鈥 with humanity. Listening to sources 鈥 with respect. Seeing the story that others are missing by reporting what so often gets overlooked: the values that connect us. That鈥檚 Monitor reporting 鈥 news that changes how you see the world.
QR Code to Chimps form friendships based on trust: The banana-sharing test
Read this article in
/Science/2016/0115/Chimps-form-friendships-based-on-trust-The-banana-sharing-test
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe