CHIMPS' CHOICES SHOW THEM TO BE SIMIAN SWINGERS.Byline: Matt Crenson Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. There may be more monkey business going on among chimpanzees than scientists once thought. A study suggests that half of all chimpanzees may be conceived on the sly when females sneak off Verb 1. sneak off - leave furtively and stealthily; "The lecture was boring and many students slipped out when the instructor turned towards the blackboard" slip away, sneak away, sneak out, steal away for risky trysts with males outside their social group. Female chimpanzees' secret sex lives come as something of a surprise to researchers, who previously thought that they almost always mated within their own group of 20 to 100 animals. ``When they can get away with it, they sneak off and they try to expand the pool of possible fathers,'' said Pascal Gagneaux, a professor at the University of California, San Diego UCSD is consistently ranked among the top ten public universities for undergraduate education in the United States by U.S. News & World Report.[3] It is a Public Ivy. [1] For graduate studies, most of UCSD's Ph.D. . Working with UCSD UCSD University of California, San Diego (La Jolla, California) UCSD User Centered System Design UCSD Urbana-Champaign Sanitary District (Illinois) UCSD Ultra Cool Sexy Dudes biologist David Woodruff and Christophe Boesch of the Basel Zoological Institute in Switzerland, Gagneaux painstakingly worked out the genetic family tree of a chimpanzee chimpanzee, an ape, genus Pan, of the equatorial forests of central and W Africa. The common chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes, lives N of the Congo River. Full-grown animals of this species are up to 5 ft (1. group living in the Tai Forest of West Africa's Ivory Coast Ivory Coast: see Côte d'Ivoire. . Between 1991 and 1995, he and his colleagues collected DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. samples from all 52 members of the Tai Forest group. The DNA came from hair - collected from chimpanzee sleeping nests by researchers who climbed trees more than 100 feet tall - and from chewed fruit, which yielded cells from inside the mouth. Paternity tests on the DNA yielded a shocking result: Of 13 infants, only seven were fathered by members of the Tai Forest group. Richard Wrangham Richard Wrangham is a British primatologist. He is a Professor in Biological Anthropology at Harvard University. His primary studies include chimpanzee behaviour in Kibale Forest National Park, Uganda. , a Harvard professor who studies chimpanzees in Uganda, said that because of the animals' ferocious territorial behavior, extra-group couplings might actually have a practical benefit: A female that has such a tryst creates the possibility that her offspring may be related to a neighboring male. That might lead the neighboring male to show mercy in a future encounter with her or her offspring. In his own research, Wrangham has seen females lurking about a neighboring group's territory. So he was not surprised to learn that some infants among the Tai chimps have fathers from other groups. ``But even so, 50 percent seems extraordinarily high,'' he said. ``There's still a lot that's mysterious about this.'' Gagneaux's findings, published in today's issue of the journal Nature, give female chimpanzees a much more important role in the reproductive process. Evolutionary biologists often treat females as a prize to be won by the most deserving male. But Gagneaux said that's the wrong way to look at things. ``Females are not some sort of resource that just wait there like fruit to be picked,'' Gagneaux said. ``Females have their own agenda.'' Apparently, that agenda includes sneaking off to mate with their hunkiest neighbors. It's common in chimpanzee society for a female to disappear for a day or two, so nobody really notices the absence of a trysting tryst n. 1. An agreement, as between lovers, to meet at a certain time and place. 2. A meeting or meeting place that has been agreed on. See Synonyms at engagement. intr.v. female. But if she were to be caught, Gagneaux said, dire consequences would result. Male chimps physically dominate females to get what they want, and sometimes kill infants that they believe aren't theirs. Chimp societies are complicated affairs, with strictly obeyed but constantly shifting hierarchies that determine which animals get the best fruit, mates and sleeping nests. Neighboring groups almost never interact, except to fight over territory. Since those fights are females' only opportunity to check out the neighbors, Gagneaux hypothesizes that all the histrionics that males engage in during the conflicts - the hooting, the stomping, the thumping of trees - may be the chimpanzee equivalent of a strapping suburbanite's mowing mow 1 n. 1. The place in a barn where hay, grain, or other feed is stored. 2. A stack of hay or other feed stored in a barn. the lawn shirtless. |
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