首次接吻可追溯至2100万年前
First kiss dates back 21M years

原始链接: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cr43gq61g2qo

## 亲吻的进化史 一项新研究表明,亲吻并非人类独有——它是一种具有深厚进化根源的行为。研究人员将亲吻定义为非攻击性的口对口接触,伴随嘴唇运动且*不*涉及食物交换,并将它的起源追溯到2100万年前,追溯到人类和大型猿类的共同祖先。 在包括黑猩猩、倭黑猩猩、狼、草原犬鼠、北极熊甚至信天翁等不同物种中发现了亲吻的证据。有趣的是,该研究提出尼安德特人可能也亲吻,他们的DNA中与现代人共享口腔微生物,表明长期存在唾液交换。 虽然*为什么*仍然是个谜,但理论认为亲吻可能起源于梳理行为,或者是一种评估伴侣健康和相容性的方式。研究人员强调,研究这种行为的重要性超越了它的浪漫联想,认识到它与我们的动物亲属共享的特征。

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原文

Victoria GillScience correspondent, BBC News

The researchers found evidence of kissing in multiple species

Humans do it, monkeys do it, even polar bears do it. And now researchers have reconstructed the evolutionary origins of kissing.

Their study suggests that the mouth-on-mouth kiss evolved more than 21 million years ago, and was something that the common ancestor of humans and other great apes probably indulged in.

The same research concluded that Neanderthals may have kissed too – and that humans and Neanderthals may even have smooched one another.

The scientists studied kissing because it presents something of an evolutionary puzzle - it has no obvious survival or reproductive benefits, and yet it is something that is seen not just in many human societies, but across the animal kingdom.

The scientists defined a kiss as mouth-on-mouth contact "with some movement of lips or mouthparts and no food transfer"

By finding evidence of other animals engaging in kissing, scientists were able to construct an "evolutionary family tree" to work out when it was most likely to have evolved.

To ensure that they were comparing the same behaviour across different species, the researchers had to give a very precise - rather unromantic - definition to a "kiss".

In their study, published in the journal Evolution and Human Behaviour, they defined kissing as non aggressive, directed oral-oral contact "with some movement of lips or mouthparts and no food transfer".

"Humans, chimps, and bonobos all kiss," explained lead researcher Dr Matilda Brindle, an evolutionary biologist from the University of Oxford. From that, she concluded, "it's likely that their most recent common ancestor kissed."

"We think kissing probably evolved around 21.5 million years ago in the large apes."

In this study, scientists found behaviour that matched their scientific definition of kissing in wolves, prairie dogs, polar bears (very sloppy - lots of tongue), and even albatrosses.

They focused on primates - and apes in particular - in order to build an evolutionary picture of the origin of the human kiss.

The same study also concluded that Neanderthals - our closest ancient human relatives that died out around 40,000 years ago - also kissed.

One previous piece of research on Neanderthal DNA also showed that modern humans and Neanderthals shared an oral microbe - a type of bacteria found in our saliva.

"That means that they must have been swapping saliva for hundreds of thousands of years after the two species split," explained Dr Brindle.

The scientists say this behaviour is something 'we share with our non-human relatives'

While this study pinpointed when kissing evolved it was not able to answer the question of why.

There are already a number of theories - that it arose from grooming behaviour in our ape ancestors or that it might provide an intimate way to assess the health and even the compatibility of a partner.

Dr Brindle hopes that this will open a door to answering that question.

"It's important for us to understand that this is something we share with our non-human relatives," she said.

"We should be studying this behaviour, not just dismissing it as silly because it has romantic connotations in humans."

Many great apes engage in kissing

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