'Adoption' by maternal siblings in wild chimpanzees

Publication date

2014-08-01

Authors

Hobaiter, Catherine
Schel, Anne M.ISNI 0000000427180144
Langergraber, Kevin
Zuberbühler, Klaus

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

The adoption of unrelated orphaned infants is something chimpanzees and humans have in common. Providing parental care has fitness implications for both the adopter and orphan, and cases of adoption have thus been cited as evidence for a shared origin of an altruistic behaviour. We provide new data on adoptions in the free-living Sonso chimpanzee community in Uganda, together with an analysis of published data from other long-term field sites. As a default pattern, we find that orphan chimpanzees do not become adopted by adult group members but wherever possible associate with each other, usually as maternal sibling pairs. This occurs even if both partners are still immature, with older individuals effectively becoming 'child household heads'. Adoption of orphans by unrelated individuals does occur but usually only if no maternal siblings or other relatives are present and only after significant delays. In conclusion, following the loss of their mother, orphaned chimpanzees preferentially associate along pre-existing social bonds, which are typically strongest amongst maternal siblings. © 2014 Hobaiter et al.

Keywords

adaptive behavior, adoption, adult, adult animal, animal behavior, animal care, animal community, animal wellbeing, article, chimpanzee, female, infant, male, maternal attitude, nonhuman, observational study, sibling, social bonding, Uganda

Citation

Hobaiter, C, Schel, A M, Langergraber, K & Zuberbühler, K 2014, ''Adoption' by maternal siblings in wild chimpanzees', PLoS One, vol. 9, no. 8, e103777. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103777