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Home»International News»Chimpanzee groups stun scientists with killing spree
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Chimpanzee groups stun scientists with killing spree

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auApril 10, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Chimpanzee groups stun scientists with killing spree
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Will Dunham

April 10, 2026 — 3:30pm

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Washington: For two decades, researchers observed members of the Ngogo chimpanzee group of Kibale National Park in Uganda spend their days eating fruits and leaves, resting, travelling and grooming in their tropical rainforest abode. But this stable community then fractured and descended into years of deadly violence.

The researchers are now describing the first clearly documented example of a group of wild chimpanzees splitting into two separate factions, with one launching a series of co-ordinated attacks against the other. Adult males and infants were targeted, with 28 deaths.

Researchers for the first time observed how chimpanzee society fractured into violence.

“[They were] biting, pounding the victim with their hands, dragging them, kicking them – mostly adult males, but sometimes adult females participate in the attacks,” said University of Texas primatologist Aaron Sandel, lead author of the study published on Thursday in the journal Science.

The researchers began studying the Ngogo chimpanzees in 1995. This was the largest-known group of wild chimpanzees anywhere, peaking at about 200 members. Chimpanzee groups typically number about 50.

Researchers have long known chimpanzees will attack and kill members of neighbouring chimpanzee groups – essentially strangers – but this was different.

“It is hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that yesterday’s friend turned into today’s foe,” said primatologist and study senior author John Mitani, a University of Michigan professor emeritus.

“Males in the two groups grew up with each other, knew each other their entire lives and co-operated and collaborated with each other, benefiting in the process.

“So why split? Perhaps they became a victim of their own success when the group grew to an intolerably large size.”

The researchers said a combination of factors might have destabilised the group. Its original large size might have intensified feeding competition for everyone and rivalry among the males to mate with females. The 2014 deaths of seven chimpanzees amid signs of illness might have disrupted social relationships, creating hostilities.

Chimpanzee communities are male-dominated. There was a change in the alpha male – the group’s highest-ranking chimpanzee – around the time that the tensions began, in 2015, with a chimpanzee called Jackson deposing another male.

Scientists believe the chimpanzees’ social structure could have been disrupted by a number of factors.Getty Images/iStockphoto

Before the split, the group was one cohesive community, though social clusters existed. Members of two clusters began avoiding each other in 2015. Months after an illness in 2017 killed 25 chimpanzees, mostly infants, members of one of the clusters attacked Jackson, though he survived. By the end of 2017, two distinct groups had formed, labelled the Western and Central groups.

The subsequent violence was perpetrated by the Western group against the Central group, starting in 2018.

The published study included observations through 2024, with seven adult males and 17 infants killed, for a total of 24. The violence has continued. Last year and this year, one adult male, one adolescent male and two infants were killed, raising the death toll to 28. Many chimpanzees have disappeared without clear cause, suggestive of additional unrecorded killings.

“They just beat and jump on the victim relentlessly. I’ve witnessed cases that take less than 15 minutes. There’s some biting, and if you examine the bodies of victims, you will see cuts. But nothing that looks like it can cause a fatality,” Mitani said.

‘It is hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that yesterday’s friend turned into today’s foe.’

John Mitani, study senior author

“Instead, I’ve always thought that mature victims die due to internal injuries.

“By contrast, a single mature chimpanzee can snatch an infant from its mother and kill it quickly with a few bites or via blunt force trauma. The latter might include slamming it to the ground.”

The Western group began smaller in size and territory but eventually surpassed the Central group in both. The Western group apparently has experienced no casualties.

Related Article

Chimpanzees can consume the equivalent of two alcoholic drinks a day.

While the scientists preferred not to call these events a civil war, a term with specific meaning in human conflict, they saw important similarities.

The researchers noted one prior example of a chimpanzee community apparently splitting, with lethal aggression by one faction against the other, in Tanzania in the 1970s. In that instance, researchers had regularly fed the chimpanzees, altering natural behaviour, and observed them only at the feeding location, leaving many questions unanswered.

Chimpanzees and their close cousins, bonobos, are our closest evolutionary relatives. But the researchers cautioned against drawing parallels between chimpanzee violence and human behaviour.

“We are similar in some ways due to our shared evolutionary history, but we are also fundamentally different because we have changed during the past 6-8 million years, after having split off from them,” Mitani said.

Reuters

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