We can learn a lot about human behavior by studying other animal species, particularly primates. Humans are indeed part of the primate family. Chimpanzees are one of our closest animal relatives, sharing close to 98% of our DNA. In fact, if you consider just the portions of our genome that code for proteins, we share 99% of our DNA with chimpanzees - most of the differences in our DNA involve portions of the genome that do not code for proteins. It's believed that Homo sapiens (that's us) shared a common ancestor with chimpanzees over 6-7 million years ago.
I first mentioned a book by the late primatologist Frans de Waal called Chimpanzee Politics in a blog post in 2019 ("A cup of Joe, rough sandpaper, a soft chair, and a clipboard is all you need"). The book is about animal behavior, specifically the group behavior of the chimpanzees living at the Royal Burgers Zoo in Arnhem in the Netherlands. During a study that lasted for several years, de Waal described a number of Machiavellian tendencies of the group, leading to his "Machiavellian intelligence hypothesis" (also known as the "social brain hypothesis" or "social intelligence hypothesis"), which posits that the challenges involved in navigating complex group dynamics in society is a major driving force in the evolution of human intelligence. In order to succeed within social groups, individuals must strike a balance between cooperation and competition with the other individuals in the group, resorting to what some refer to as "soft skills" rather than brute force. Apparently, the book has been highly recommended by a number of management and leadership experts, and it was reportedly very influential on former U.S. Speaker of the House New Gingrich during the 1990's. It's a fascinating book that is well worth the investment of time, and I added it to my Leadership Reverie Reading List in 2022.
I mention Chimpanzee Politics in the context of a recent CNN article that I read by Taylor Nicioli ("Chimpanzees in Uganda are in a ‘civil war,’ and researchers are unsure how it will end"). Nicioli's article is, in turn, based on a new research study published in the journal Science ("Lethal conflict after group fission in wild chimpanzees"). Apparently, scientists working with the Ngogo Chimpanzee Project in Uganda’s Kibale National Park have observed the start of a "civil war" between two sub-clusters of what was once a single, albeit large group of chimpanzees living there.
Wars have been fought throughout history for all different kinds of reasons. The "cultural marker hypothesis" claims that differences in ethnicity, religion, language, and other cultural markers anchor group identity in such a way that favors cooperation and cohesion between members within the group and competition and even outright hostility to members outside the group. One problem with the "cultural marker hypothesis" is that it fails to explain how conflict occurs inside a group, such as a revolution or civil war. As the scientists working with the Ngogo Chimpanzee Project have recently found out, shifting allegiances and rivalries can occur within a group as well, even to the extent that can generate intra-group conflict and fracture the group.
Aaron Sandel, the co-director of the Ngogo Chimpanzee Project and lead author on the Science paper, and the research team analyzed more than 20 years of data and identified three key stages that led to the fission of the group and eventual lethal aggression: (i) an abrupt shift from cohesion to polarization that created two distinct sub-groups or clusters within the greater group; (ii) a slow (2 year) period of increasing avoidance between the two groups; and (iii) lethal aggression between the two sub-groups or clusters.
The chimpanzees at Ngogo were part of a single, large group when the study first began in 1995. Despite belonging to the single, large group, there were two distinct sub-groups or clusters, which the researchers called the Western cluster and the Central cluster. While members within each cluster spent more time together, they did interact with members of the other cluster. Until around 2014, about 30% of individuals switched clusters from one year to the next. The two clusters shared the same territory, as well as the same set of reproductive partners - 44% of infants were conceived by males and females belonging to different clusters.
There was an episode occurring on June 24, 2015 in which two groups of males from the Western and Central clusters approached each other near the center of the territory. The males from the Western cluster ran away when the males from the Central cluster chased them, and for the next six weeks, both clusters avoided each other. Nicioli writes, "The once close-knit group of chimps were suddenly treating each other like strangers." Sandel remembers fellow researcher John Mitani, "What's going on?" Mitani replied, "I don't know." Sandel says, "And that also stuck with me, because this is one of the world’s experts on chimps. He’d studied these chimps for two decades. But we were seeing something new."
Sandel believes that single event "planted the seeds of polarization" that eventually led to the group's downfall, which is what the data subsequently showed. From 2015 to 2018, the two clusters became more distinct. The Western and Central clusters began to coalesce in separate territories - what was once the center of the larger group's shared territory became a distinct border between the two clusters. After 2015, all of the infants born in the group were conceived by males and females from the same cluster.
Beginning in 2018, males within the Central cluster began to conduct "patrols" towards males in the Western cluster, and aggressive interactions became more frequent. After 2018, Western chimpanzees began to attack and kill males from the Central cluster. Beginning in 2021, lethal aggression expanded to infants. The single group had permanently splintered into two.
What was notable to me from this study was that the Ngogo group had grown significantly in size over the course of the study. By the time that signs of group disharmony appeared around 2015, there were over 200 chimpanzees in the group, which far exceeded the size of other chimpanzee groups reported elsewhere. The research team also had noted that five adult males and one adult female had died after exhibiting clinical signs of illness, just before the event in June, 2015. The loss of even weakly connected nodes in the overall network could have disrupted the social network. There was also a change in the alpha (dominant) male in 2015, which also coincided with the first separation of the two clusters. Either explanation is possible, but the research team will likely never know for certain.
Sandel and his team concluded, "If chimpanzee groups can polarize, split, and engage in lethal aggression without human-type cultural markers, then relational dynamics may play a larger causal role in human conflict than assumed." Moreover, while it is tempting to attribute polarization between groups to ethnic, religious, or political differences, Sandel and his fellow researchers suggest, "Focusing entirely on these cultural factors overlooks social processes that shape human behavior - processes also present in one of our closest animal relatives. In some cases, it may be in the small, daily acts of reconciliation and reunion between individuals that we find opportunities for peace."
