Fatuous article describing the findings of research by Andrea Wobber, of Harvard, and Brian Hare, of Duke, on hormonal changes in men, bonobos and chimpanzees, in anticipation of male-male competition and conflict.
"They found that males of both species who were intolerant and could not share with their partners showed hormonal changes in anticipation of competing for the food, but bonobos and chimpanzees were completely different in which hormones increased.
Male chimpanzees showed an increase in testosterone, which is thought to prepare animals for competition or aggressive interactions. By contrast, male bonobos showed an increase in cortisol, which is associated with stress and more passive social strategies in other animals.
"Chimpanzee males reacted to the competition as if it was a threat to their status, while bonobos reacted as if a potential competition is stressful by showing changes in their cortisol levels," said Victoria Wobber, a Harvard graduate student and first author of the study.
Human males usually experience an increase in cortisol before many types of competition in a similar way as seen in the bonobos. However, if men have what is called a "high power motive," or a strong desire to achieve high status, they experience an increase in testosterone before a competition.
"These results suggest that the steroid hormone shifts that are correlated with the competitive drive of men are shared through descent with other apes," Wobber said."
I'll bet they are also shared with a whole variety of species that engage in male-male competition from time to time. Again, the inference is that both chimps and bonobos act as yard-sticks for human behaviour and the hormonal changes that are associated with it. Yet cortisol and testosterone are hardly the exclusive province of the higher primates.
"While some men may seem more bonobo-like before competition and others more chimpanzee-like, something unique about human males is that after competition they experience an increase in testosterone if they win or a decrease in testosterone if they lose. This variation in hormones post-competition was not observed in either chimpanzees or bonobos.
"It's exciting because we can see that in some ways we're similar to bonobos, in others we're similar to chimpanzees," said Duke anthropologist Brian Hare, co-author. "But then there's also a part of our biology that seems to be entirely unique."
What, pray, is exciting about that? Again, the sense portrayed is that we have "essence of chimp" and "essence of bonobo" in our make-up, which is plainly ridiculous. See the little bit of fun I have at Frans de Waal's expense at the beginning of the chapter "Povinellis Gauntlet".
For the record
2 hours ago