Humans: Unusually Murderous Mammals, Typically Murderous Primates
From https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/09/humans-are-unusually-violent-mammals-but-averagely-violent-primates/501935/
Two Barbary Macaque monkeys in Tiergarten Schoenbrunn zoo, Austria
AustriaStefan Huwiler / Getty
Humans: Unusually Murderous Mammals, Typically Murderous Primates
A new study looks at rates of lethal violence across a thousand species to better understand the evolutionary origins of humanitys own inhumanity.
ED YONG SEP 28, 2016 SCIENCE
Which mammal is most likely to be murdered by its own kind? Its certainly not humansnot even close. Nor is it a top predator like the grey wolf or lion, although those at least are #11 and #9 in the league table of murdery mammals. No,
according to a study led by José María Gómez from the University of Granada, the top spot goes to
the meerkat. These endearing black-masked creatures might be famous for their cooperative ways, but they kill each other at a rate that makes mans inhumanity to man look meek. Almost one in five meerkats, mostly youngsters, lose their lives at the paws and jaws of their peers.
Gómezs study is the
first thorough survey of violence in the mammal world, collating data on more than a thousand species. It clearly shows that we humans are not alone in our capacity to kill each other. Our closest relatives, the chimpanzees, have been known to wage brutal war, but even apparently peaceful creatures take each others lives. When ranked according to their rates of lethal violence, ground squirrels, wild horses, gazelle, and deer all feature in the top 50. So do long-tailed chinchillas, which kill each other more frequently than tigers and bears do.
The point of this macabre census was to understand the origins of our own behavior. Gómez typically studies plants and insects, but he realized that the techniques he uses to study their evolution can be used to study our own. In particular, he noted that closely related species tend to show similar levels of lethal interpersonal violence. He could use those similarities to predict how violent any given mammal should be, and whether it meets, exceeds, or defies those expectations.
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More at link.