Man Didn't Turn Chimps Into Killers
                                              
                       Chimpanzees are "natural born killers," and their 
tendency toward lethal aggression is not a result of human influence, a 
new study finds. The study, published in Nature,
 looked at chimp-on-chimp killings in 18 chimp communities over a span 
of five decades and assessed how much those communities had been 
affected by human activities.
Chimpanzees are "natural born killers," and their 
tendency toward lethal aggression is not a result of human influence, a 
new study finds. The study, published in Nature,
 looked at chimp-on-chimp killings in 18 chimp communities over a span 
of five decades and assessed how much those communities had been 
affected by human activities. 
Researchers found killings to be most 
common in the east African communities that had been least touched by humans, according to a press release.
 At the site most affected by human interference, in Guinea, no killings
 took place. "Patterns of lethal aggression ... show little correlation 
with human impacts," the authors say, "but are instead better explained 
by the adaptive hypothesis that killing is a means to eliminate rivals 
when the costs of killing are low.
"
                                                                
                                                                
                                                                    
Researchers concluded that, in addition to eliminating rivals, chimps 
kill to get better mates, food, resources, or access to territory. The 
study bolsters evidence that such killings are an evolved, adaptive 
tactic as chimps seek to pass on their own genes, rather than a 
consequence of deforestation or humans studying and feeding chimps. 
The 
findings are particularly interesting because, as the Washington Post
 reports, chimpanzees are the only animals other than humans who "go to 
war" with each other. But the study—which refutes another high-profile 
study blaming human interference for chimps' warlike tendencies, the Chicago Tribune reports—has inspired some debate. 
Two anthropologists tell the New York Times
 the researchers didn't actually establish that any of the communities 
studied were truly free from human interference. (Another fascinating 
recent study finds that primates are capable of abstract thought.)