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Ugandadenのキバリ国家公園内の世界最大規模の野生チンパンジー集団が、約8年間、内戦状態にあると研究者たちは報告しています。この研究は科学誌Scienceに発表されています。
1. アーロン・サンデル氏(研究チームリーダー)によると、200人の近隣居住のチンパンジーが約8年前から分裂し、対立を続けているとされます。
2. 2015年6月に西側のチンパンジーが逃げ去り、中央部のグループによって追われた事件をきっかけとして、双方のグループは回避行動を取るようになりました。その後、2018年にこの二つのグループ間の攻撃が始まりました。
3. 両グループの分裂後、24件の攻撃があったうち、少なくとも7人の成年男性と17人のinfantが死亡しています。
4. 研究者は、グループの大きさや資源競争、そして繁殖における「オス間競争」などが原因である可能性を指摘しています。また、3つの要因として、2014年の5匹の成年雄と1匹の成年雌の死亡、2017年に発生した呼吸器疾患による25匹の死亡、そして2018年にアファルマックスがトップに立ったことなどがあげられています。
Researchers say the world's largest known wild chimpanzee community in Uganda fractured into rival factions and has been locked in a vicious "civil war" for the last eight years. "It is not clear exactly why the once close-knit community of Ngogo chimpanzees at Uganda's Kibale National Park are at loggerheads, but since 2018 the scientists have recorded 24 killings, including 17 infants," reports the BBC. From the report: [O]ver several decades, [lead author Aaron Sandel] said the nearly 200 Ngogo chimpanzees had lived in harmony. There were divided into two sets - known to researchers as Western and Central - but they had existed overall as a cohesive group. Sandel said he first noticed them polarizing in June 2015, when the Western chimpanzees ran away and were chased by the Central group. "Chimpanzees are sort of melodramatic," he said, explaining that following arguments there would ordinarily be "screaming and chasing" and then later, they would grooming and co-operating.
But following the 2015 dispute, the researchers saw that there was a six-week avoidance period between the two sets, with interactions becoming more infrequent. When they did occur, Sandel said they were "a little more intense, a little more aggressive." Following the emergence of the two distinct groups in 2018, members of the Western group started attacking the Central chimpanzees. In 24 targeted attacks since the split, at least seven adult males and 17 infants from the Central chimps have been killed, the study found, although the researchers believe the actual number of deaths are higher. The researchers believe many factors such as the group size and subsequent competition of resources, and "male-male competition" for reproducing may be to blame.
But they say there were three likely catalysts:
- The first, were the deaths of five adult males and one adult female -- for reasons unknown -- in 2014, which could have disrupted social networks and weakened social ties across the subgroups
- The following year, there was a change in the alpha male, which the study says coincided with the first period of separation between the Western and Central groups. "Changes in the dominance hierarchy can increase aggression and avoidance in chimpanzees," it explained
- The third factor was the deaths of 25 chimpanzees, including four adult males and 10 adult females, as a result of a respiratory epidemic, in 2017, a year before the final separation. One of the adult males who died was "among the last individuals to connect the groups," the research paper said. The study has been published in the journal Science.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.