Human impact erodes chimpanzee behavioral diversity

Bibliographic Collection: 
APE
Publication Type: Journal Article
Authors: Kühl, Hjalmar S.; Boesch, Christophe; Kulik, Lars; Haas, Fabian; Arandjelovic, Mimi; Dieguez, Paula; Bocksberger, Gaëlle; McElreath, Mary Brooke; Agbor, Anthony; Angedakin, Samuel; Ayimisin, Emmanuel Ayuk; Bailey, Emma; Barubiyo, Donatienne; Bessone, Mattia; Brazzola, Gregory; Chancellor, Rebecca; Cohen, Heather; Coupland, Charlotte; Danquah, Emmanuel; Deschner, Tobias; Dowd, Dervla; Dunn, Andrew; Egbe, Villard Ebot; Eshuis, Henk; Goedmakers, Annemarie; Granjon, Anne-Céline; Head, Josephine; Hedwig, Daniela; Hermans, Veerle; Imong, Inaoyom; Jeffery, Kathryn J.; Jones, Sorrel; Junker, Jessica; Kadam, Parag; Kambere, Mbangi; Kambi, Mohamed; Kienast, Ivonne; Kujirakwinja, Deo; Langergraber, Kevin E.; Lapuente, Juan; Larson, Bradley; Lee, Kevin; Leinert, Vera; Llana, Manuel; Maretti, Giovanna; Marrocoli, Sergio; Martin, Rumen; Mbi, Tanyi Julius; Meier, Amelia C.; Morgan, Bethan; Morgan, David; Mulindahabi, Felix; Murai, Mizuki; Neil, Emily; Niyigaba, Protais; Ormsby, Lucy Jayne; Orume, Robinson; Pacheco, Liliana; Piel, Alex; Preece, Jodie; Regnaut, Sebastien; Rundus, Aaron; Sanz, Crickette; van Schijndel, Joost; Sommer, Volker; Stewart, Fiona; Tagg, Nikki; Vendras, Elleni; Vergnes, Virginie; Welsh, Adam; Wessling, Erin G.; Willie, Jacob; Wittig, Roman M.; Yuh, Yisa Ginath; Yurkiw, Kyle; Zuberbühler, Klaus; Kalan, Ammie K.
Year of Publication: 2019
Journal: Science
Volume: 363
Issue: 6434
Pagination: 1453
Date Published: 2019/03/29
Publication Language: eng
Abstract:

We often frame negative human impacts on animal species in terms of numbers of individuals reduced or numbers of regions from which species are absent. However, human activities are likely affecting species in more complex ways than these figures can capture. Kühl et al. studied behavioral and cultural diversity in our closest relative, the chimpanzee. They found that human-mediated disturbance is reducing these complex traits. Human influence thus goes well beyond simple loss of populations or species, leading to behavioral change even where populations persist.Science, this issue p. 1453Chimpanzees possess a large number of behavioral and cultural traits among nonhuman species. The “disturbance hypothesis” predicts that human impact depletes resources and disrupts social learning processes necessary for behavioral and cultural transmission. We used a dataset of 144 chimpanzee communities, with information on 31 behaviors, to show that chimpanzees inhabiting areas with high human impact have a mean probability of occurrence reduced by 88%, across all behaviors, compared to low-impact areas. This behavioral diversity loss was evident irrespective of the grouping or categorization of behaviors. Therefore, human impact may not only be associated with the loss of populations and genetic diversity, but also affects how animals behave. Our results support the view that “culturally significant units” should be integrated into wildlife conservation.

DOI: 10.1126/science.aau4532
Short Title: Science
Export: