A common explanation for hunting in groups is that doing so yields a greater per capita caloric benefit than hunting solitarily.
This is logical for social carnivores, which rely exclusively on meat for energy, but arguably not for omnivores, which obtain
calories from either plant or animal matter. The common chimpanzee,
Pan troglodytes, is one of the few true omnivores that regularly hunts in groups. Studies to date have yielded conflicting data regarding
the payoffs of group hunting in chimpanzees. Here, we interpret chimpanzee hunting patterns using a new approach. In contrast
to the classical assumption that hunting with others maximizes per capita caloric intake, we propose that group hunting is
favored because it maximizes an individual’s likelihood of obtaining important micronutrients that may be found in small quantities
of meat. We describe a mathematical model demonstrating that group hunting may evolve when individuals can obtain micronutrients
more frequently by hunting in groups than by hunting solitarily, provided that group size is below a certain threshold. Twenty
five years of data from Gombe National Park, Tanzania are consistent with this prediction. We propose that our ‘meat-scrap’
hypothesis is a unifying approach that may explain group hunting by chimpanzees and other social omnivores.
Keywords Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) - Hunting - Cooperation - Diet - Micronutrients - Macronutrients
Communicated By D. Watts