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Like humans, wild chimpanzees focus on fewer but more meaningful friendships as they grow older, research suggests.
The study provides the first evidence that non-humans also exhibit age-related social selectivity, researchers say.
The study draws on 78,000 hours of observations, made between 1995 and 2016, which looked at the social interactions of 21 male chimpanzees between the ages of 15 and 58 years old in the Kibale National Park in Uganda.
Researchers from the Harvard department of human evolutionary biology looked only at male chimpanzees as they show stronger social bonds and have more frequent social interactions than female chimps.
They found that the animals displayed much of the same behaviour ageing humans exhibit.
The really cool thing is that we found that chimpanzees are showing these patterns that mirror those of humans
The older chimpanzees preferred spending more time with – and grooming – chimps they had developed mutual friendships with over the years.
Younger animals had more one-sided relationships where grooming wasn’t always returned.
Older males were also more likely to spend more time alone but interacted with more important social partners like their ageing mutual friends.
According to the study published in the Science journal, like older humans looking for some peace and quiet, the chimpanzees also showed a shift from negative interactions to more positive ones as they reached their twilight years.
Alexandra Rosati, an assistant professor of psychology and anthropology at the University of Michigan and one of the paper’s lead authors, said: “The really cool thing is that we found that chimpanzees are showing these patterns that mirror those of humans.”
She added: “There’s really a pressing need to understand the biology of ageing.
“More humans are living longer than in the past, which can change the dynamics of ageing.”
The research tested the origins of humans prioritising close, positive relationships as they age and if it is really triggered by a theory known as socioemotional selectivity.
It suggests the central process driving social selectivity as people age results from them becoming aware their time is running out and wanting to make the best of that.
But the researchers say their findings suggest there is more to understand.
Richard Wrangham, professor of biological anthropology and founder and co-director of the Kibale Chimpanzee Project, said: “Even though chimps are very smart, they do not understand they’re going to die.
“Much more likely something else is going on in chimps to explain why their relationships become more positive as they get older. And then the question is what applies to chimps the same as what applies to humans.”
The study also found that older chimpanzees preferred sitting close to those who preferred sitting close to them.
These are categorised as mutual friendships while one-sided friendships are when one animal prefers sitting close to another, but the other doesn’t share that habit.
Researchers found that 15-year-old chimpanzees had on average 2.1 one-sided friendships and 0.9 mutual friends. The 40-year-olds almost did not bother with one-sided friendships but did have plenty of mutual friends, an average of three.
Prof Wranham added: “It raises the possibility that we are seeing behavioural systems that have been shared evolutionarily back to our common ancestor around seven or eight million years ago.”