Literature DB >> 30209230

Bonobos voluntarily hand food to others but not toys or tools.

Christopher Krupenye1,2,3, Jingzhi Tan4,5,6, Brian Hare4,7.   

Abstract

A key feature of human prosociality is direct transfers, the most active form of sharing in which donors voluntarily hand over resources in their possession Direct transfers buffer hunter-gatherers against foraging shortfalls. The emergence and elaboration of this behaviour thus likely played a key role in human evolution by promoting cooperative interdependence and ensuring that humans' growing energetic needs (e.g. for increasing brain size) were more reliably met. According to the strong prosociality hypothesis, among great apes only humans exhibit sufficiently strong prosocial motivations to directly transfer food. The versatile prosociality hypothesis suggests instead that while other apes may make transfers in constrained settings, only humans share flexibly across food and non-food contexts. In controlled experiments, chimpanzees typically transfer objects but not food, supporting both hypotheses. In this paper, we show in two experiments that bonobos directly transfer food but not non-food items. These findings show that, in some contexts, bonobos exhibit a human-like motivation for direct food transfer. However, humans share across a far wider range of contexts, lending support to the versatile prosociality hypothesis. Our species' unusual prosocial flexibility is likely built on a prosocial foundation we share through common descent with the other apes.
© 2018 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  bonobo; chimpanzee; cooperation; human evolution; prosociality; sharing

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30209230      PMCID: PMC6158520          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.1536

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  46 in total

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8.  Differences in the cognitive skills of bonobos and chimpanzees.

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