The question of human monogamy has been debated for centuries. It has long been hypothesised that monogamy is a cornerstone of the social cooperation that allowed humans to dominate the planet.
However, anthropologists find a wide range of mating norms among humans. For example, previous research shows that 85% of pre-industrial societies permitted polygynous marriage – where a man is married to several women at the same time.
To calculate human monogamy rates, Dyble used genetic data from archaeological sites, including Bronze Age burial grounds in Europe and Neolithic sites in Anatolia, and ethnographic data from 94 human societies around the world: from Tanzanian hunter-gatherers the Hadza, to the rice-farming Toraja of Indonesia.
“There is a huge amount of cross-cultural divers…
The question of human monogamy has been debated for centuries. It has long been hypothesised that monogamy is a cornerstone of the social cooperation that allowed humans to dominate the planet.
However, anthropologists find a wide range of mating norms among humans. For example, previous research shows that 85% of pre-industrial societies permitted polygynous marriage – where a man is married to several women at the same time.
To calculate human monogamy rates, Dyble used genetic data from archaeological sites, including Bronze Age burial grounds in Europe and Neolithic sites in Anatolia, and ethnographic data from 94 human societies around the world: from Tanzanian hunter-gatherers the Hadza, to the rice-farming Toraja of Indonesia.
“There is a huge amount of cross-cultural diversity in human mating and marriage practices, but even the extremes of the spectrum still sit above what we see in most non-monogamous species,” said Dyble.
The study, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society: Biological Sciences, has humans at an overall 66% rate for full siblings, placing us seventh of eleven species in the study considered socially monogamous and preferring long-term pair bonds.
Meerkats come in at a 60% full-sibling rate, while beavers just beat humans for monogamy with a 73% rate. As with humans, this suggests a significant trend towards monogamy for these species, but with a solid amount of flexibility.
The white-handed gibbon comes closest to humans in the study, with a monogamy rate of 63.5%. It’s the only other top-ranked “monotocous” species, meaning it usually has one offspring per pregnancy, unlike the litters had by other monogamous mammals.
The only other non-human primate in the top division is the moustached tamarin: a small Amazonian monkey that typically produces twins or triplets, and has a full sibling rate of almost 78%.
All other primates in the study are known to have either polygynous or polygynandrous (where both males and females have multiple partners) mating systems, and rank way down the monogamy table.
Mountain gorillas manage a 6% full sibling rate, while chimpanzees come in at just 4% – on a par with dolphins. Various macaque species, from Japanese (2.3%) to Rhesus (1%), sit almost at the bottom of the table.
“Based on the mating patterns of our closest living relatives, such as chimpanzees and gorillas, human monogamy probably evolved from non-monogamous group living, a transition that is highly unusual among mammals,” said Dyble.
Among the few with a similar evolutionary shift are species of wolf and fox, which have a degree of social monogamy and cooperative care, whereas the ancestral canid was likely to have been group-living and polygynous.
The Grey Wolf and Red Fox sneak into the upper league with full sibling rates of almost half (46% and 45% respectively), while African species have much higher rates: the Ethiopian wolf comes in at 76.5%, and the African Wild dog is ranked second for monogamy with a rating of 85%.
Top of the table is the California deermouse that stays paired for life once mated, with a 100% rating. Ranked bottom is Scotland’s Soay sheep, with 0.6% full siblings, as each ewe mates with several rams.
“Almost all other monogamous mammals either live in tight family units of just a breeding pair and their offspring, or in groups where only one female breeds,” said Dyble. “Whereas humans live in strong social groups in which multiple females have children.”
The only other mammal believed to live in a stable, mixed-sex, multi-adult group with several exclusive pair bonds is a large rabbit-like rodent called the Patagonian mara, which inhabits warrens containing a number of long-term couples.
Dyble added: “This study measures reproductive monogamy rather than sexual behaviour. In most mammals, mating and reproduction are tightly linked. In humans, birth control methods and cultural practices break that link.”
“Humans have a range of partnerships that create conditions for a mix of full and half-siblings with strong parental investment, from serial monogamy to stable polygamy.”
Monogamy League Table
Monogamy League Table
| Common Name | % Full Siblings |
|---|---|
| California deermouse | 100 |
| African wild dog | 85 |
| Damaraland mole rat | 79.5 |
| Moustached Tamarin | 77.6 |
| Ethiopian wolf | 76.5 |
| Eurasian beaver | 72.9 |
| Humans | 66 |
| Lar (white-handed) gibbon | 63.5 |
| Meerkat | 59.9 |
| Grey wolf | 46.2 |
| Red fox | 45.2 |
| Black rhinoceros | 22.2 |
| European badger | 19.6 |
| African lion | 18.5 |
| Long-tailed macaque | 18.1 |
| Feral cat | 16.2 |
| Banded mongoose | 15.9 |
| Rock wallaby | 14.3 |
| Ringtailed coati | 12.6 |
| Spotted hyena | 12 |
| Eastern chipmunk | 9.6 |
| White-faced capuchin | 8.5 |
| Mountain gorilla | 6.2 |
| Olive baboons | 4.8 |
| Common chimpanzee | 4.1 |
| Bottlenose dolphin | 4.1 |
| Vervet monkey | 4 |
| Savannah baboon | 3.7 |
| Killer whale | 3.3 |
| Antarctic fur seal | 2.9 |
| Black bear | 2.6 |
| Japanese macaque | 2.3 |
| Rhesus Macaque | 1.1 |
| Celebes crested macaque | 0.8 |
| Soay sheep | 0.6 |