世界最大級のチンパンジー集団の分裂が致死的暴力を引き起こす(First Clearly Documented Split in World’s Largest Known Chimpanzee Community Leads to Deadly Violence)

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2026-04-09 テキサス大学オースチン校(UT Austin)

テキサス大学オースティン校の研究は、世界最大級とされるチンパンジー集団において初めて明確な分裂が確認され、それが致死的な暴力行動につながったことを報告した。長期観察の結果、もともと一つだった大規模コミュニティが複数のサブグループに分裂し、縄張りや資源を巡る対立が激化。最終的に集団間で攻撃や殺害が発生した。これは人類に近い社会構造を持つチンパンジーにおいて、集団分裂と暴力の関係を示す重要な事例である。研究は、社会的緊張や資源競争が集団行動に与える影響を示し、人類の社会進化や紛争理解にも示唆を与える成果とされる。

世界最大級のチンパンジー集団の分裂が致死的暴力を引き起こす(First Clearly Documented Split in World’s Largest Known Chimpanzee Community Leads to Deadly Violence)
Chimpanzees from the Western group attack members of the Central group in 2019. Photo by Aaron Sandel.

<関連情報>

野生チンパンジーの集団分裂後に発生した致命的な衝突 Lethal conflict after group fission in wild chimpanzees

Aaron A. Sandel, Yixuan He, Junpeng Ren, Yik Lun Kei, […] , and John C. Mitani
Science  Published:9 Apr 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adz4944

Editor’s summary

Group conflict among nonhuman animals from mongooses to monkeys is well known. However, lethal conflict among groups of animals that were once socially affiliated has not previously been observed outside of humans, in whom cultural ideologies can drive divisions among individuals within the same group. Sandel et al. now describe the gradual dissipation of a group of Ngogo chimpanzees over many years, ending with two socially isolated groups, one of which conducted multiple lethal raids upon the other, leading to the death of both adults and infants (see the Perspective by Brooks). The unrelated deaths of key interconnected individuals may have contributed to the eventually violent split. —Sacha Vignieri

Abstract

Territorial conflicts in animals can inform aspects of human warfare, but civil war, with its shifting group identities, has not been previously observed. We report a rare, permanent fission in the largest-known group of wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Using 30 years of behavioral observations and network analyses, we describe a transition from cohesion to polarization in 2015 and the emergence of two distinct groups by 2018. Over the next 7 years, members of one group made 24 attacks, killing at least seven mature males and 17 infants in the other group. These findings indicate that group identities can shift and escalate into lethal hostility in one of our closest living relatives in the absence of the cultural markers often thought necessary for human warfare.

生物環境工学
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