
-
France's Macron kicks off pomp-filled UK state visit
-
Mbappe and PSG set for Club World Cup reunion as Real Madrid eye final
-
US to send 'more weapons' to Ukraine: Trump
-
Most markets rise as Trump sends tariff letters, delays deadline
-
Slovak gunman who shot PM to go on trial
-
As heatwaves intensify, Morocco ups effort to warn residents
-
All Blacks captain Scott Barrett out for rest of France series
-
AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry
-
Trump says new tariff deadline 'not 100 percent firm'
-
Trump hosts Netanyahu in push for Gaza deal
-
Alpha males are rare among our fellow primates: scientists
-
At least 10 dead in Kenya during protests after heavy police deployment
-
Alcaraz, Sabalenka headline action in Wimbledon quarter-finals
-
Trump unveils first wave of steeper US tariffs, extends deadline
-
Knicks hire two-time NBA Coach of the Year Brown to guide club
-
Medical groups sue US health secretary over Covid-19 vaccine change
-
Now 48, man becomes 140th 'stolen grandchild' tracked in Argentina
-
Sinner wins Wimbledon reprieve after Dimitrov injury heartbreak, Djokovic survives
-
Trump unveils first wave of steeper US tariffs in push for deals
-
Swiss MLS goalie Frei resting at home after on-field collision
-
Relentless Spain reach Euro 2025 quarters after thumping Belgium
-
US stocks retreat from records on Trump tariff deluge
-
MLB Nationals name Cairo interim manager after shake-up
-
Sinner into Wimbledon quarter-finals after injury heartbreak for Dimitrov
-
Pacers guard Haliburton will miss entire '25-26 NBA season
-
Texas floods: How geography, climate and policy failures collided
-
Sinner into Wimbledon quarters after injured Dimitrov retires
-
UN General Assembly condemns 'systematic oppression' of women in Afghanistan
-
Epstein died by suicide, did not have 'client list': govt memo
-
Trump, Brazil's Lula clash over politically charged coup trial
-
Trump to meet Netanyahu in push for Gaza deal
-
Swiatek into Wimbledon quarter-finals
-
High-speed fall forces Philipsen out of Tour de France
-
Trump says to slap allies Japan, South Korea with 25% tariffs
-
Maresca shrugs off heat concerns as Chelsea face 'ugly duckling' Fluminense
-
Youth camp confirms 27 dead as Texas flood toll passes 90
-
US revoking 'terrorist' designation for Syria's HTS
-
Trump threatens allies Japan, South Korea with 25% tariffs
-
Relentless Spain thump Belgium to close in on Euro 2025 quarters
-
Wimbledon changes line-calling system after embarrassing blunder
-
France backs returning colonial-era 'talking drum' to I.Coast
-
King hails 'spirit of unity' as Britain remembers 7/7 attacks
-
US measles epidemic its worst of 21st century
-
Djokovic survives scare to reach Wimbledon quarters, Sinner in action
-
Looted art: the battle for looted treasures
-
Trump slaps allies Japan, South Korea with 25% tariffs
-
Belgian Merlier wins crash-marred Tour de France dash to Dunkirk
-
Celebs light up Schiaparelli to open Paris Haute Couture Week
-
Youth camp confirms 27 dead as Texas flood toll nears 90
-
Respect for Lara stops Mulder short of world Test record

Alpha males are rare among our fellow primates: scientists
New research on Monday contradicted the commonly held idea that males dominate females among primates, revealing far more nuanced power dynamics in the relationships of our close relatives.
"For a long time we have had a completely binary view of this issue: we thought that a species was either dominated by males or females -- and that this was a fixed trait," Elise Huchard, a primatologist at the University of Montpellier in France, told AFP.
"Recently, this idea has been challenged by studies showing that the truth is much more complicated," said the lead author of a new study published in the journal PNAS.
The French-German team of researchers combed through scientific literature for interactions between male and female primates that revealed their hierarchical relationships.
These included aggression, threats and signs of dominant or submissive behaviour, such as when one primate spontaneously moved out of the way of another.
Over five years, the team gathered data from 253 populations across 121 primate species, including a range of monkeys, lemurs, tarsiers and lorises.
They found that confrontations between members of the opposite sex were much more frequent than had been previously thought. On average, more than half of these interactions within a group involved a male and a female.
Males clearly dominating females, which was defined as winning more than 90 percent of these confrontations, was only observed in 17 percent of the populations. Among this minority were baboons and chimpanzees, which are the closest living relatives to humans.
Clear female domination was recorded in 13 percent of the primate populations, including lemurs and bonobos.
This meant that for 70 percent of the primates, either males or females could be at the top of the pecking order.
- Battle of the sexes -
When male domination was particularly pronounced, it was usually in a species where males have a clear physical advantage, such as bigger bodies or teeth.
It was also more common among ground-bound species, in which females are less able to run and hide compared to their relatives living in the trees.
Females, meanwhile, tended to dominate over societies when they exerted control over reproduction.
For example, the genitals of female baboons swell when they are ovulating. Males jealously guard females during these few days of their menstrual cycle, making sure that other competitors cannot mate with them.
However in bonobos, this sexual swelling is less obvious.
"Males never know when they are ovulating or not. As a result, (the female bonobos) can mate with whoever they want, whenever they want, much more easily," Huchard said.
Female dominance is also more common when females compete with each other, and when males provide more care for the young.
In these species, females are often solitary or only live in male-female pairs. This means that monogamy is closely linked to female dominance.
Can these results be extrapolated to our own species? There are a great many differences between humans and our fellow primates, Huchard emphasised.
But we would broadly fall into the middle category in which neither males nor females always have strict dominance over the other.
"These results corroborate quite well with what we know about male-female relationships among hunter-gatherers, which were more egalitarian than in the agricultural societies that emerged later" in human history, Huchard said.
I.Saadi--SF-PST