Birth attendance has been proposed as a distinguishing feature of humans (Homo sapiens) and it has been linked to the difficulty of the delivery process in our species. Here, we provide the first quantitative study based on video-recordings of the social dynamics around three births in captive bonobos (Pan paniscus), human closest living relative along with the chimpanzee. We show that the general features defining traditional birth attendance in humans can also be identified in bonobos. As in humans, birth in bonobos was a social event, where female attendants provided protection and support to the parturient until the infant was born. Moreover, bystander females helped the parturient during the expulsive phase by performing manual gesture...
In long–lived social mammals such as primates, individuals can benefit from social bonds with close ...
Background: Preterm birth is a leading cause of perinatal mortality, yet the evolutionary history of...
<div><p>In long–lived social mammals such as primates, individuals can benefit from social bonds wit...
Birth attendance has been proposed as a distinguishing feature of humans (Homo sapiens) and it has b...
Birth attendance has been proposed as a distinguishing feature of humans (Homo sapiens) and it has b...
Sociality around birth has been proposed as a unique feature of our species and traces its origin to...
Birth in mammals is a crucial and delicate moment and it has been described in many species. Despite...
Birth in non-human primates has been described in several species but there is an almost total lack ...
International audienceHow nonhuman primates deal with birth, at the moment of delivery, and during t...
There are few detailed descriptions of parturition behavior in wild primates. Here we report for the...
Primates, particularly females, tend to be attracted to infants that are not their own and are often...
Sociality is widespread among group-living primates and is beneficial in many ways. Sociality amongs...
Contemporary research hypothesizes that biological inheritance and ontogenetic factors shape the dev...
Abstract: Studies on Cereopithecine primate maternal styles, using factor analysis on a set of mater...
In many mammals, early social experience is critical to developing species appropriate adult behavio...
In long–lived social mammals such as primates, individuals can benefit from social bonds with close ...
Background: Preterm birth is a leading cause of perinatal mortality, yet the evolutionary history of...
<div><p>In long–lived social mammals such as primates, individuals can benefit from social bonds wit...
Birth attendance has been proposed as a distinguishing feature of humans (Homo sapiens) and it has b...
Birth attendance has been proposed as a distinguishing feature of humans (Homo sapiens) and it has b...
Sociality around birth has been proposed as a unique feature of our species and traces its origin to...
Birth in mammals is a crucial and delicate moment and it has been described in many species. Despite...
Birth in non-human primates has been described in several species but there is an almost total lack ...
International audienceHow nonhuman primates deal with birth, at the moment of delivery, and during t...
There are few detailed descriptions of parturition behavior in wild primates. Here we report for the...
Primates, particularly females, tend to be attracted to infants that are not their own and are often...
Sociality is widespread among group-living primates and is beneficial in many ways. Sociality amongs...
Contemporary research hypothesizes that biological inheritance and ontogenetic factors shape the dev...
Abstract: Studies on Cereopithecine primate maternal styles, using factor analysis on a set of mater...
In many mammals, early social experience is critical to developing species appropriate adult behavio...
In long–lived social mammals such as primates, individuals can benefit from social bonds with close ...
Background: Preterm birth is a leading cause of perinatal mortality, yet the evolutionary history of...
<div><p>In long–lived social mammals such as primates, individuals can benefit from social bonds wit...