The Columbus Dispatch

Mongoose battles may be excuse to find new mates

Females in family groups initiate fighting

- Christina Larson

WASHINGTON – When families of banded mongooses prepare to fight, they form battle lines.

Each clan of about 20 animals stands nose to nose, their ears flattened back, as they stare down the enemy. A patch of scrubby savanna separates them, until the first animals run forward.

“Then they bunch up into writhing balls, chaotic and fast-moving, and you hear high-pitched screeches,” said Michael Cant, a biologist at the University of Exeter who has been studying the species in Uganda for 25 years. “We call it mongoose warfare.”

The catlike striped mammals only weigh up to 5 pounds each, but the vicious fights can last more than an hour. A question that has intrigued Cant and other scientists is: Why do these social animals fight?

Chimpanzee­s are the most famous example of family-oriented mammals who wage group warfare – both to defend or expand their territorie­s and to take females from other families. But individual mongooses almost never leave the group they’re born into.

Banded mongooses are known for almost unbreakabl­e devotion to their birth family – as well as cooperativ­e living habits, including sharing denguardin­g and pup-rearing responsibi­lities, said Cant.

Combining field observatio­ns and analysis of 19 years of demographi­c and behavioral data for a population of 10 to 12 families – about 200 mongooses at any time – Cant and his colleagues have found that at least one purpose of the fights is to allow females a chance to mate with opponent males. That avoids or minimizes inbreeding.

“We think females play a role in inciting these conflicts to escape the males in their own family groups during the confusion and chaos of battle,” said Cant.

Their research, published Monday in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, found that almost all fights are initiated by groups when their females are in estrus or fertile, which happens among all females at the same time. Often the females take a lead in steering groups to places where they will encounter combative neighbors. About 20% of pups in a group are sired by males from opposing groups, DNA analysis showed.

“This is fascinatin­g research on a pretty unique situation,” said Michael Wilson, a biological anthropolo­gist at the University of Minnesota, who studies group fighting in mammals and was not involved in the new study. “What’s driving this is partly the dilemma the females find themselves in.”

The female mongooses are strongly motivated to find mates in other groups, Wilson said. “But it’s really hard to do that because as soon as they come into estrus, they get followed doggedly by a male in their own group. The only way they can shake him off is to visit the neighbors and start a fight.”

Because of the risk of predation from leopards, pythons and birds of prey, mongooses almost never leave their family groups to wander alone, said Francis Mwanguhya, who works with Cant as field manager of the Banded Mongoose Research Project in Uganda.

In most social mammals, such as gorillas, lions, wolves and humans, offspring of at least one gender leave their parents’ group to find mates and join other families.

In the relatively few species where that’s not the case, other strategies are needed to prevent inbreeding. Killer whales, for instance, rarely leave their birth families, but family groups come together for mating.

“You need different mating strategies when no one ever leaves the group,” said Cant.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

 ?? DAVE SEAGER/BANDED MONGOOSE RESEARCH PROJECT VIA AP ?? Two banded mongoose groups form battle lines in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda. There’s evidence the females in the tightly knit family groups initiate fights in order to breed with outside males.
DAVE SEAGER/BANDED MONGOOSE RESEARCH PROJECT VIA AP Two banded mongoose groups form battle lines in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda. There’s evidence the females in the tightly knit family groups initiate fights in order to breed with outside males.

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