Abstract

Sixty years of research on chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) at Gombe National Park, Tanzania have revealed many similarities with human behaviour, including hunting, tool use, and coalitionary killing. The close phylogenetic relationship between chimpanzees and humans suggests that these traits were present in the last common ancestor of Pan and Homo (LCAPH). However, findings emerging from studies of our other closest living relative, the bonobo (Pan paniscus), indicate that either bonobos are derived in these respects, or the many similarities between chimpanzees and humans evolved convergently. In either case, field studies provide opportunities to test hypotheses for how and why our lineage has followed its peculiar path through the adaptive landscape. Evidence from primate field studies suggests that the hominin path depends on our heritage as apes: inefficient quadrupeds with grasping hands, orthograde posture, and digestive systems that require high quality foods. Key steps along this path include: (1) changes in diet; (2) increased use of tools; (3) bipedal gait; (4) multilevel societies; (5) collective foraging, including a sexual division of labor and extensive food transfers; and (6) language. Here I consider some possible explanations for these transitions, with an emphasis on contributions from Gombe.

Highlights

  • In 1960, Jane Goodall established the first long-term field study of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) at what is Gombe National Park, Tanzania, just over a century after On the origin of species (Darwin, 1859) laid the foundation for an evolutionary understanding of human origins

  • Long-term field studies of chimpanzees at Gombe and other sites have amply fulfilled the hopes of visionaries such as Leakey and Imanishi

  • Decades of systematic study have revealed both striking similarities between chimpanzees and humans and profound differences

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Summary

Introduction

In 1960, Jane Goodall established the first long-term field study of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) at what is Gombe National Park, Tanzania, just over a century after On the origin of species (Darwin, 1859) laid the foundation for an evolutionary understanding of human origins. Other studies that follow Gombe’s model of collaborative long-term field research have broadened our understanding of living primates, 2 Michael Lawrence Wilson providing invaluable comparative data for testing hypotheses about how and why humans evolved our many distinctive traits.

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