Kamwokya Times
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Kamwokya Times
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Why Uganda’s Chimpanzee ‘Civil War’ Happened: Inside the Slow Collapse of a Once United Group

Kamwokya Times by Kamwokya Times
April 13, 2026
in News
0 0
0
Why Uganda’s Chimpanzee ‘Civil War’ Happened: Inside the Slow Collapse of a Once United Group
Share on FacebookShare on X

By KT Reporter

Long before the killings began in Kibale National Park, something else was already breaking down. A chimpanzee community that had lived, fed and moved together for years started pulling apart quietly, its members avoiding each other, relationships thinning, and familiar bonds giving way to mistrust. By the time the violence came, the split had already taken hold.

That conclusion comes from a long-running study by researchers led by Alexander A. Sandel, John C. Mitani, Kevin E. Langergraber and David P. Watts, who have tracked the Ngogo chimpanzees for nearly three decades. Their work draws on 30 years of behavioural observation, 24 years of social network data and 10 years of GPS tracking, making it one of the most detailed records of chimpanzee social life ever compiled.

What has drawn global attention is the scale of the violence that followed. But the study argues the real story lies in how a stable group fractured in the first place.

Researchers say the break was not driven by anything resembling human cultural divisions such as ethnicity or ideology. Instead, it grew out of shifting relationships inside the group itself. The findings support what the study describes as the “relational dynamics hypothesis” — that changing social ties and local rivalries can divide a community and lead to organised violence on their own.

The turning point came in 2015.

Other InterestingArticles

NRM Supporters in Yumbe Demand New Districts and Cabinet Representation

184 MPs Take Oath on Day One of Swearing-In Ceremony

MUST, Entebbe Hospital Join Forces to Transform Paediatric Surgical Care

Newly Ordained Clerics Warned Against Adultery and Selfishness

In Decision-Making AI Cannot Replace Leadership Responsibility, Executives Told

Rukungiri NRM Mobilizers Protest Unpaid Campaign Allowances

Medics in Amudat Warn Against Traditional Scarification of Infants

Gen. Moses Ali Returns to Parliament, Likely to Be Oldest MP

On June 24 of that year, chimpanzees from what would later become rival factions met near the centre of their territory. Instead of merging, one group fled and the other gave chase. What followed was a six-week period of avoidance — something researchers say had not been observed before. Later analysis identified 2015 as the most significant structural shift in the group’s social network over 24 years.

The study points to a combination of pressures behind the split.

The size of the group is one factor. With nearly 200 individuals, including more than 30 adult males, the Ngogo community had grown unusually large. Researchers say this may have strained social bonds and increased competition, even in a territory with abundant food that still fluctuates over time.

Reproductive competition also appears to have played a role. The report shows that reproductive separation began before the final break. By March 2015, the last known offspring from parents who would later belong to different groups had been conceived. After that, reproduction took place only within the emerging factions.

Loss of key individuals may have further weakened the group.

In 2014, five adult males and one adult female died, representing more than 10 percent of the mature males. Some showed signs of illness. Researchers say these losses may have disrupted connections across clusters and contributed to the sharp rise in polarization the following year.

A leadership change added to the strain.

A new alpha male emerged in 2015, at the same time the first sustained separation was observed. While not the sole cause, the shift in dominance may have intensified tensions in an already fragile social network.

Disease also played a part.

In January 2017, a respiratory outbreak killed 25 chimpanzees, including four adult males and 10 adult females. The study says the outbreak came after the split had begun, but likely accelerated the final separation by removing individuals who still linked the two sides.

As the divide deepened, behaviour changed with it.

By 2016, the group that would become the Western faction had begun territorial patrols targeting the Central group. In 2017, Central chimpanzees responded. That same year, Western chimpanzees attacked and severely injured a Central male who had once belonged to their own cluster. At the same time, the shared territory was splitting. By 2017, what had once been common ground had effectively become a border.

By 2018, the split was complete.

The Western group counted 10 males and 22 females aged 12 and above, while the Central group had 30 males and 39 females. After that, there were no social ties between the two groups and no reproduction across the divide.

The violence came next.

Between 2018 and 2024, the Western group carried out repeated raids into Central territory, killing adult males and infants. Researchers recorded multiple lethal attacks, with killings averaging one adult male and two infants per year.

What makes the case striking is that the victims were not outsiders.

They were individuals who had once lived, fed and patrolled together. The study says this cannot be explained by simple hostility to strangers, but by a shift in group identity that redefined who belonged and who did not.

The smaller Western group led the attacks despite being outnumbered, suggesting that cohesion within the group may have outweighed numbers.

For the researchers, the Ngogo case offers a rare look at how conflict can grow from within.

Their conclusion is that the roots of violence may lie not in fixed divisions, but in the gradual breakdown of relationships inside a community that once held together.

-UBC. Give us feedback on this story through our email: kamwokyatimes@gmail.com

Post Views: 184

Read RelatedArticles

NRM Supporters in Yumbe Demand New Districts and Cabinet Representation
News

NRM Supporters in Yumbe Demand New Districts and Cabinet Representation

May 13, 2026
4
184 MPs Take Oath on Day One of Swearing-In Ceremony
News

184 MPs Take Oath on Day One of Swearing-In Ceremony

May 13, 2026
16
MUST, Entebbe Hospital Join Forces to Transform Paediatric Surgical Care
News

MUST, Entebbe Hospital Join Forces to Transform Paediatric Surgical Care

May 13, 2026
4
Newly Ordained Clerics Warned Against Adultery and Selfishness
News

Newly Ordained Clerics Warned Against Adultery and Selfishness

May 13, 2026
9
In Decision-Making AI Cannot Replace Leadership Responsibility, Executives Told
News

In Decision-Making AI Cannot Replace Leadership Responsibility, Executives Told

May 13, 2026
2
Rukungiri NRM Mobilizers Protest Unpaid Campaign Allowances
News

Rukungiri NRM Mobilizers Protest Unpaid Campaign Allowances

May 13, 2026
9

Top Stories

NRM Supporters in Yumbe Demand New Districts and Cabinet Representation
News

NRM Supporters in Yumbe Demand New Districts and Cabinet Representation

by Kamwokya Times
May 13, 2026
0
4

Read more

184 MPs Take Oath on Day One of Swearing-In Ceremony

MUST, Entebbe Hospital Join Forces to Transform Paediatric Surgical Care

Newly Ordained Clerics Warned Against Adultery and Selfishness

Featured News

NRM Supporters in Yumbe Demand New Districts and Cabinet Representation
News

NRM Supporters in Yumbe Demand New Districts and Cabinet Representation

by Kamwokya Times
May 13, 2026
0
4

Read more

184 MPs Take Oath on Day One of Swearing-In Ceremony

MUST, Entebbe Hospital Join Forces to Transform Paediatric Surgical Care

Newly Ordained Clerics Warned Against Adultery and Selfishness

Kamwokya Times

Copyrights © 2024 All Rigts Reserved

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Contact

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Contact

Copyrights © 2024 All Rigts Reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?