By Stuart Blackman

Published: Monday, 28 November 2022 at 12:00 am


What are bonobos?

The bonobo is a species of great ape and part of the Hominidae family. There are eight extant (living) species, consisting of the bonobo, the closely related chimpanzee, two species of gorilla, three species of orangutan, and humans.

Where are bonobos found?

Bonobos are found only within the Congo Basin in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in Central Africa.

What is the difference between a chimp and a bonobo?

Visually and genetically there isn’t much between the two great apes. Chimpanzees and bonobos share approximately 99.6% of their DNA and can be hard to tell apart. In fact, bonobos were once thought to be merely smaller versions, and called pygmy chimpanzees.

To the trained eye, bonobos are more graceful and slender, with differently shaped and coloured faces. You are also more likely to see them walking on two legs.

However, it is in their social systems that you really see divergence. Rather than having a strict male hierarchy like chimps, they are a matriarchal society: the girls very much rule the bonobo world. Groups are generally led by an alpha female, females almost always have a higher social standing than males, and males derive their status from that of their mother.

Bonobos are also much more sexual, using ‘sexual contact’ to greet friends, de-escalate conflicts and cement relationships. They are the apes who make love not war!

Q&A answered by Leoma Williams.