Bonobo
From Primatome
ladies rule
In bonobo society, the females take charge and keep lifelong bonds with their sons. When a daughter is old enough, she must leave the troop and find another one tojoin. She will breed with all the males in the new group, and she gains permanent membership when she gives birth. Adult females form strong bonds with each other. The female-led troops tend to be relatively peaceful, and bonobos seem to be sensitive to each other’s needs.
Baby bonobos
Infants are born almost helpless and must be carried everywhere by their mothers for the first two years. A youngster stays close to its mother for several years while it grows and learns how to be a part of bonobo society. Bonobos use touch to give reassurance and comfort to each other. They form close relationships with other members of the troop, even after they are grown. Although bonobos can reach their sexual maturity at 6 to 8 years of age, the females don’t usually have their first baby until they are about 13 years old.
Playtime
Playing is a part of growing up, as the young bonobos gain independence and test their skills against each other. The youngsters play some of the same games you might play, such as King of the Mountain, where one chimp parades around on top of a hill or rock while the others try to pull him or her down, and Blindman’s Bluff, where young bonobos cover their eyes with their hands and run around chasing each other!
Food
They are nimble climbers and can swing from tree to tree searching for tasty fruit. Bonobos forage for food during the day in small groups, often sharing the food they’ve found, then gather together in larger groups to build their sleeping nests. These clever apes fish for termites with grass stems, gather honey with sticks, crack open nuts with rocks, and sponge water out of tree trunks with leaves. Bonobos also spend hours hunting for earthworms to snack on—a rain forest candy to them!
At the San Diego Zoo and the San Diego Zoo’s Wild Animal Park, we feed the bonobos a variety of fruits and veggies: bananas, apples, oranges, grapes, turnips, carrots, yams, spinach, and broccoli, as well as leafy clippings from ficus, honeysuckle, hibiscus, and sugarcane, and leaf eater biscuits. For treats, they get popcorn, nuts, and seeds.
Nests aren’t just for the birds!
Bonobos use leaves and twigs to build sturdy nests in the forks of trees each evening. By all sleeping in the same area they can help each other look out for predators such as leopards and snakes. They can also keep track of each other. Adult bonobos sometimes share a nest, which is a unique behavior among the great apes.
Who’s the smartest of them all?
Some scientists believe that bonobos are the most intelligent of the primates (other than humans, of course!). Maybe that’s because, genetically, bonobos are considered our closest living relatives. They share many of our human behaviors, such as teaching their young social skills, using tools to get food, and working together for the good of the entire troop. Scientists have taught a few bonobos, housed in labs, how to communicate with humans by using symbols that represent words on a board. They can understand spoken words and reply to questions or ask for things by pointing to symbols. Bonobos even laugh when they are tickling each other or playing together, and they do other things that may remind you of some people you know!
Bonobos in trouble
Sadly, there are few bonobos left in the wild and so they are considered the most endangered of the great apes. Humans continue to move into bonobo habitat, hunting these amazing apes for food and selling their babies into the pet trade. Commercial logging operations create new roads to harvest timber, giving people easier access to hunt or capture many rain forest species. There are also few bonobos in zoos. The San Diego Zoo and the Wild Animal Park have successfully bred and maintained these intelligent and curious apes since 1960 and we continue to fund conservation efforts for them in central Africa.