CONNIVING: A study has found that gelada monkeys in Ethiopia cheat on their partners. |
Johannesburg - Humans aren’t the only creatures in the animal kingdom who cheat and try to deceive their partners.
Researchers from the University of the Free State (UFS) were amazed to find that primates really do monkey around.
A long-term research study on
gelada monkeys in Ethiopia found that not only do they cheat on their
partners, but they deviously try to cover up what they are doing. If
caught, the dominant male beats up the pair of lovers.
Geladas, also known as the
“bleeding-heart baboon”, are the first animals that have ever shown
proof that humans are not the only ones who cheat on their partners and
try to hide the act.
Researcher Dr Aliza le Roux, from
the department of zoology and entomology at UFS, said they worked
alongside researchers from the universities of Michigan and Pennsylvania
for three years watching the behaviour of the primates.
She said it was not the first time
that cheating had been discovered in the animal kingdom, although it
wasn’t observed often, but it was the first time researchers had seen
that animals try to deceive their partners to prevent them from finding
out about the infidelity.
“We
found the first solid evidence that monkeys tried to disguise their
cheating, and that there was punishment if they were caught,” Le Roux
said.
Geladas are quite unusual in the
primate world, not only for their enormous group sizes (over 700
individuals forage together), but also for a certain lack of social
intelligence. Males appear to recognise only their closest partners and
nobody else.
“It was therefore a surprise to
discover that geladas hide their misdemeanours from others. To not only
cheat, but to time your cheating so that the dominant male won’t see
you, and then to suppress your cries of joy… all of this takes a bit of
brain power.”
Le Roux said they also witnessed low-ranking males trying to mate with females outside the natural pecking order.
“This is not so unusual. What is
unusual is that the monkeys changed their behaviour in order to escape
the consequences of discovery by the dominant male.”
Researchers found the
cheating pair would deceive the dominant male by waiting until he
wandered a distance away for a quick liaison.
“Then
they would suppress their natural mating cries (which are loud,
unmistakable calls) and try to get it all over and done with in under 30
seconds,” Le Roux said. - The Star
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