History of Feminism
Related: About this forumMale monkey cares for dying partner
( in light of ridiculous "Evo-psych" arguments about male behavior, I thought I'd post this here; these are not apes, as pointed out, or particularly relevant here, but a touching story nonetheless)
Such behaviour is "astounding", say scientists, having only been previously recorded in primates among chimpanzees and humans.
The marmosets were the dominant pair in their group, having been committed partners for three-and-a-half years.
Within months of the female's death, the male left the group, never to return.
Details of the extraordinary interaction are published in the journal Primates, along with a video recording the behaviour.
His gentle care and attention towards her left me astounded
Primatologist Ms Bruna Bezerra of the University of Bristol, who witnessed the encounter
Primatologists spotted the two monkeys while observing common marmosets living in a fragment of Atlantic forest in northeast Brazil.
The team, including Dr Bruna Bezerra of the University of Bristol, UK and colleagues at the Federal Rural University of Pernambuco, in Recife, Brazil, had been studying the same group of common marmosets for a number of years.
While observing the monkeys the scientists saw the group's dominant female, which they called F1B, fall from a tree, hitting her head on an object on the ground.
Fatally wounded, F1B lay in agony on the ground for two-and-a-half hours before passing away.
"The most remarkable behaviour during this time came from the dominant male M1B," the researchers report.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/26924936
JustAnotherGen
(33,390 posts)Sweet Did you read within the article - and see the pics of the sweet bonobos too?
ismnotwasm
(42,443 posts)I thought it was a great article.
I love science, but it's kind of fun when scientists get befuddled by behavior they didn't expect.
AtheistCrusader
(33,982 posts)I get more and more uncomfortable all the time with keeping animals in cages at zoos. It started for me with observations about the Orcas at SeaWorld, living in their tiny concrete bowls, versus how they interact and move in the wild...
I think we have grossly underestimated the sentience/feelings of most animals, and that what we are doing in zoos, even as wonderful as they are for letting people interact and view wild animals they would otherwise never see, still amounts to little more than what you'd get throwing a young human child in a cage for no reason, forever.
Emotional damage for animals, most people don't even realize HAVE emotions.
ismnotwasm
(42,443 posts)We are finding animals communicate with a type of language, emotions (although scientists debate this) behaviors not always instinct driven.
And in the case of some- the favorite example being Dolphins and Great Apes -- some sort of sentience.
And we go on killing them. Of course we kill each other as well, but there is a deep wrongness here.