Kin Selection, Social Structure, Gene Flow, and the Evolution of Chimpanzees

Phillip A. Morin(University of California San Diego), James J. Moore(University of California San Diego), Ranajit Chakraborty(The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston), Jin Li(The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston), Jane Goodall(The Jane Goodall Institute), David S. Woodruff(University of California San Diego)
Science
August 26, 1994
Cited by 557

Abstract

Hypotheses about chimpanzee social behavior, phylogeography, and evolution were evaluated by noninvasive genotyping of free-ranging individuals from 20 African sites. Degrees of relatedness among individuals in one community were inferred from allele-sharing at eight nuclear simple sequence repeat (SSR) loci. Males are related on the order of half-siblings, and homozygosity is significantly increased at several SSR loci compared to Hardy-Weinberg expectations. These data support the kin-selection hypothesis for the evolution of cooperation among males. Sequence variation patterns at two mitochondrial loci indicate historically high long-distance gene flow and clarify the relationships among three allopatric subspecies. The unexpectedly large genetic distance between the western subspecies, Pan troglodytes verus, and the other two subspecies suggests a divergence time of about 1.58 million years. This result, if confirmed at nuclear loci and supported by eco-behavioral data, implies that P. t. verus should be elevated to full species rank.


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