© 2024
In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
KTOT-FM 89.5 serving the northeast TX Panhandle is off the air due to the failure of both air conditioning units needed to cool it's high-power transmitter. The air conditioning units are currently being replaced and other HVAC improvements made. If all goes well, we hope to have these repairs made and KTOT back on the air by the end of the day on Friday, 10/10. We apologize for this this interruption in service. In the meantime, you can always listen on-line through the player above or on HPPR's mobile app to either HPPR Mix, KTOT's regular programming, or HPPR Connect featuring all news and information programming.

Need to break up with someone? Baboons have found a good way to do it, study finds

Just like humans, groups of baboons sometimes break off relations.
Paula Bronstein
/
Getty Images
Just like humans, groups of baboons sometimes break off relations.

We've all had to deal with breakups — with close friends or romantic partners. But breakups aren't a uniquely human phenomenon. Our primate cousins do it too.

Robert Seyfarth, a primatologist at the University of Pennsylvania, says there are a number of ways a breakup can go down in a group of primates.

"We have known for years that primate groups, like baboons and other African monkeys and chimpanzees and gorillas, that they grow in size. And at a certain point, they may split apart," Seyfarth said.

"The question was, how do they decide who goes with whom? Are they banding together with a tight little group of kin and splitting off in that group? Or is there some despot that is determining what they're doing?"

Now a group of scientists has come up with an answer. Groups of baboons seem to split into two smaller groups in a cooperative way, rather than at the whims of a tyrannical baboon. And as in the human world, these breakups can take months or years.

"It's not an event — it's a process," says Susan Alberts, a primatologist at Duke University. "And part of the process is negotiating which social relationships are going to get broken."

Alberts is one of the authors of a work published this week by the Royal Society. She said a group of baboons might just wake up in the morning with a difference of opinion.

"Where this faction or this clique says, no, we're going to go off to that water hole, and this other clique says, well, we're going to go over to these azima bushes because the berries are ripe," Alberts said.

Alberts and her team studied seven real-world splits among wild baboons in Kenya. They mapped social bonds in those baboon groups and then studied how they broke apart.

Brian Lerch of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill led that analysis. He said these breakups could have big consequences for baboons.

"If you go through a bad breakup ... if you have a fission that disrupts your connection to your close social partners, then you might find yourself, after the fission, basically with no friends," Lerch said. "You might find yourself not having grooming partners and not having individuals to interact with."

Though Seyfarth wasn't involved in the work, he said he was intrigued to learn that baboons cooperated to dissolve relationships, and he cautioned that we shouldn't read too much into what it could mean for human bonds.

"You always find somebody who says, yeah, the baboons are showing us that you shouldn't have a despotic breakup and it's bad to just dump somebody and walk off," Seyfarth said. "But I guess I'm not going to go into that territory."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Christopher Intagliata is an editor at All Things Considered, where he writes news and edits interviews with politicians, musicians, restaurant owners, scientists and many of the other voices heard on the air.