ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Male bonobos track females' reproductive cycle to maximize mating success - Biology - Plants & Animals - Ecology
Male–male
agonistic interaction during a mating attempt in wild bonobos. Credit: Heungjin
Ryu (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Male bonobos can
decipher females' unreliable fertility signals, allowing them to focus their
efforts on matings with the highest chance of conception, according to a study
by Heungjin Ryu at Kyoto University, Japan, and colleagues published in PLOS Biology.
In most mammals, females are only
receptive to mating during ovulation, allowing males to time their mating
efforts to maximize the chances of conception. But in some primates, such as
bonobos (Pan paniscus), females become sexually receptive and display a
conspicuous pink swelling around the genitals for a prolonged period of time.
How researchers studied bonobo fertility
To investigate how males cope with
this unreliable fertility signal, researchers studied a group of wild bonobos
at Wamba in the Luo Scientific Reserve in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
During daily observations, they
recorded sexual behaviors and visually estimated the status of each female's
genital swelling. They also used filter paper to collect urine samples of the
females, allowing them to measure estrogen and progesterone levels and estimate
the timing of ovulation.
They found that ovulation probability peaked between eight and 27 days after females reached maximum swelling, making it difficult for males to predict. Despite this, males' sexual advances were closely aligned with the timing of ovulation. Males concentrated their mating efforts on females that had reached maximum swelling earlier, and whose infant offspring were older—two key sources of information indicating a higher probability of ovulation.
In this clip, the beta male Nobita carefully
looks at the sexual swelling of the female Sala while they forage for fungi on
the forest floor. Male bonobos take this task seriously—watching and checking
swelling changes so they do not miss potential ovulatory periods. Credit:
Heungjin Ryu (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Implications for bonobo mating strategies
The results show that males focus
their mating efforts on the most fertile females by combining information about
the timing of swelling and reproductive history. Because male bonobos can
effectively estimate female fertility despite an unreliable signal, there has
likely been little evolutionary pressure for the signal to become more precise.
This may explain how this system has been maintained over evolutionary time,
the authors say.
The
authors add, "In this study, we found that bonobo males, instead of trying
to predict precise ovulation timing, use a flexible strategy—paying attention to the end-signal cue of the sexual
swelling along with infant age—to fine-tune their mating efforts. This finding
reveals that even imprecise signals can remain evolutionarily functional when
animals use them flexibly rather than expecting perfect accuracy.
"Our results help explain how
conspicuous but noisy ovulatory signals, like those of bonobos, can persist and
shape mating strategies in complex social environments.
"The male bonobos weren't the only
ones paying close attention to sexual swelling—we spent countless days in the
rainforest at Wamba, DRC doing exactly the same thing! All that watching,
sweating, and scribbling in our notebooks eventually paid off. By tracking
these daily changes, we uncovered just how impressively bonobos can read
meaning in a signal that seems noisy and confusing to us."
Provided by Public Library of Science
edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: Male bonobos track females' reproductive cycle to maximize mating success

