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Tags: Sociobiology, Lang:en
Summary
Female chimpanzees exhibit exceptionally slow rates of
reproduction and raise their offspring without direct paternal
care. Therefore, their reproductive success depends critically
on long-term access to high-quality food resources over a long
lifespan. Chimpanzee communities contain multiple adult males,
multiple adult females and their offspring. Because males are
philopatric and jointly defend the community range while most
females transfer to new communities before breeding, adult
females are typically surrounded by unrelated competitors.
Communities are fission–fusion societies in which
individuals spend time alone or in fluid subgroups, whose size
depends mostly on the abundance and distribution of food. To
varying extents in different populations, females avoid direct
competition by foraging alone or in small groups in distinct,
but overlapping core areas within the community range to which
they show high fidelity. Although rates of aggression are low,
females compete for space and access to food. High rank
correlates with high reproductive success, and high-ranking
females win direct contests for food and gain preferential
access to resource-rich sites. Females are aggressive to
immigrant females and even kill the newborn infants of
community members. The intensity of such aggression correlates
with population density. These patterns are compared to those
in other species, including humans.