Largest Known Wild Chimpanzee Community Breaks Apart After Decades of Unity

Largest Known Wild Chimpanzee Community Breaks Apart After Decades of Unity

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Western Chimpanzees Attacking Central Chimpanzees
Chimpanzees from the Western group attack members of the Central group in 2019. Credit: Aaron Sandel.

Wild chimpanzees in Uganda split into two separate communities and later engaged in deadly attacks against each other. Researchers believe the conflict shows how social relationships alone can fuel polarization and violence.

The world’s largest known community of wild chimpanzees has permanently divided into two separate groups. Researchers from the University of Texas at Austin and other institutions reported the rare event in the journal Science, documenting the first clearly confirmed permanent split among wild chimpanzees and the deadly violence that followed. The study is based on 30 years of observations of the Ngogo chimpanzees in Uganda’s Kibale National Park, a population featured in the Netflix series Chimp Empire.

For the first 20 years of research, the chimpanzee community remained united. Individuals regularly moved among flexible subgroups, known as “clusters,” while maintaining social bonds across the larger group. This fission-fusion social structure is common in chimpanzees, with members temporarily separating and later rejoining.

That pattern began to change in 2015, when researchers noticed growing division between the Western and Central clusters, which increasingly avoided one another. The shift happened alongside changes in the male dominance hierarchy and followed the deaths of several adult males who may have helped keep the larger community connected.

Male Central and Western Chimpanzees Sitting Together
Male chimpanzees from the Central and Western groups sit together before the split. Credit: John Mitain.

Deadly Violence Erupts Between Former Allies

By 2018, the split had become permanent. The chimpanzees formed two independent groups, Western and Central, each occupying its own territory. Afterward, the Western group launched a series of deadly attacks against members of the Central group. From 2018 through 2024, researchers directly observed or strongly inferred seven attacks on adult males and 17 attacks on infants.

“What’s especially striking is that the chimpanzees are killing former group members,” says Aaron Sandel, associate professor of anthropology at UT Austin and the study’s lead author. “The new group identities are overriding cooperative relationships that had existed for years.”

Why Permanent Chimpanzee Fissions Are So Rare

Many primate species naturally divide into smaller groups over time, often reducing competition for food and other resources. Permanent splits among chimpanzees, however, are extremely uncommon. Genetic evidence suggests they may happen only about once every 500 years. The only other documented case occurred in the 1970s at Gombe, Tanzania, during Jane Goodall’s long-running research project.

Central Chimpanzees Embracing Western Chimpanzees
Before the 2015 split, chimpanzees from the Central group embrace members of the Western group before facing off with outsiders. Credit: Aaron Sandel.

That earlier case has remained controversial because researchers at Gombe provided food to the chimpanzees. At Ngogo, no food provisioning took place, giving scientists a more complete and natural view of chimpanzee behavior. The research also benefited from nearly 30 years of work led by John Mitani, emeritus professor of anthropology at the University of Michigan, along with a large team of researchers and Ugandan field staff.

“I would caution against anyone calling this a civil war,” says Sandel. “But the polarization and collective violence that we have observed with these chimpanzees may give us insight into our own species.”

What Chimp Conflict Reveals About Human Violence

The researchers say their findings challenge the idea that human warfare, including civil wars, is driven mainly by cultural identities such as ethnicity or religion.

“If relational dynamics alone can drive polarization and lethal conflict in chimps without language, ethnicity, or ideology, then in humans, those cultural markers might be secondary to something more basic,” says Sandel. “If that’s true, then we may have the potential to reduce societal conflicts in our personal lives, and that gives me hope. As our paper concludes, it may be in the small, daily acts of reconciliation and reunion between individuals that we find opportunities for peace.”

Reference: “Lethal conflict after group fission in wild chimpanzees” by Aaron A. Sandel, Yixuan He, Junpeng Ren, Yik Lun Kei, Kevin C. Lee, Isabelle R. Clark, Rachna B. Reddy, Jacob D. Negrey, Charles Birungi, Blessing A. Apamaku, Diana Kanweri, Davis Kalunga, Christopher Aliganyira, Sebastián Ramírez-Amaya, Phionah Nakayima, Raymond Katumba, Brian Kamugyisha, Daniela Acosta-Florez, Bas van Boekholt, Godfrey Mbabazi, Erone Akamumpa, Sharifah Namaganda, Alfred Tumusiime, Samuel Angedakin, Gesine Reinert, Oscar Madrid-Padilla, Mihai Cucuringu, David Wipf, Kevin E. Langergraber, David P. Watts and John C. Mitani, 9 April 2026, Science.
DOI: 10.1126/science.adz4944

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