Lethal aggression in Pan is better explained by adaptive strategies than human impacts

Michael L. Wilson(University of Minnesota), Richard W. Wrangham(Harvard University), Chie Hashimoto(Kyoto University), Roger Mundry(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), Jill D. Pruetz(Iowa State University), Martin N. Muller(University of New Mexico), Christophe Boesch(Public Risk Management Association), Ian C. Gilby(Duke University), Klaus Zuberbühler(Natural Resources Conservation Service), Roman M. Wittig(University of St Andrews), Crickette Sanz(Washington University in St. Louis), Anne Marijke Schel(University of York), David Morgan(Lincoln Park Zoo), Nicole Simmons(Makerere University), Michio Nakamura(Kyoto University), Catherine Hobaiter(University of St Andrews), Tetsuro Matsuzawa(Leiden University), Frances J. White(University of Oregon), Deus Mjungu(The Jane Goodall Institute), Barbara Fruth(Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp), Noriko Itoh(University of California, Los Angeles), Takeshi Furuichi(Kyoto University), John C. Mitani(University of Michigan), Anne E. Pusey(Duke University), Gottfried Hohmann(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), Julia Riedel(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), Julia N. Lloyd(Makerere University), David P. Watts(Yale University), Kathelijne Koops(University of Cambridge), Michel T. Waller(University of Oregon)
Nature
September 1, 2014
Cited by 476


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