mistermack wrote:
But the species closest to us, Bonobo apes, have sex with just about everybody, almost like shaking hands.
I don't know if they have taboos about sibling sex. If they do, it's the only one that they have.
They appear to have a "taboo" against mother-son sex, and an interesting (likely evolved) behavioral pattern, which makes sibling sex between mature individuals quite unlikely.
When a bonobo female becomes adolescent, she typically starts to withdraw from the group socially and eventually walks away completely to find a new group where she settles. Adolescent males do not leave their birth groups, so for a bonobo male the only closely related female in his group likely would be his mother. And mother-son sex among bonobos is extremely rare (which is a remarkable repeated observation, seeing as bonobos otherwise have sex at the drop of a leaf).
I've read this in a couple of Frans de Waal's books, but here is an online source. The description of the adolescents' behavior (males tend to stay, females tend to leave) is on page 62:
http://www.biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de/ ... sex_01.pdf
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