TOPICS BONOBO Chimpanzee "Ai" Crania photos Itani Jun'ichiro archives Open datasets for behavioral analysis Guidelines for Care and Use of Nonhuman Primates(pdf) Study material catalogue/database Guideline for field research of non-human primates 2019(pdf) Primate Genome DB ![]()
Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University Copyright (c) |
Fruth / Oral Genito-genital-rubbing - a display of differences in social status Barbara Fruth 1 & Gottfried Hohmann 2, Max-Planck-Institute fur Verhaltens physiology, 82319 SEEWIESEN; Max-Planck-Institute fur evolutionare Anthropology, 04155 LEIPZIG Mounting between females is known from insects, birds and
mammals. Female bonobos (Pan paniscus) show a mounting behavior which physically
differs from other primate species. They embrace each other ventro-ventrally and rub their
genital swellings laterally against each other. Although many functions were suggested, so
far none has been object of detailed investigation. Fruth, B. , Hohmann, G. & W.C. Mcgrew. 1999. The Pan Species, in: The Nonhuman
Primates, eds. P. Dolhinow & A. Fuentes, pp. 64-72, Mayfield Publishing Company.
Gerloff, U., HArtung, B., Fruth B., Hohmann, G., & D. Tautz. 1999. Intra-community
relationships, dispersal pattern and control of paternity in a wild living community of
bonobos (Pan paniscus) determined from DNA analyses of faecal samples. Proceedings
of the Royal Society of Britain, 266, 1189-1195. |