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Study on origin of kissing traces it back to early primates

The study put the first kiss at 21.5-16.9 million years ago (stock image)
The study put the first kiss at 21.5-16.9 million years ago (stock image)

Kissing did not begin with star-crossed human lovers but with the primate ancestors of great apes around 20 million years ago, according to a study.

Researchers from Oxford University and the Florida Institute of Technology wanted to examine when kissing began, given that from an evolutionary standpoint it has no obvious survival benefit, and could spread disease.

Yet humans, chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans, and gorillas all kiss, which strongly suggests the habit was inherited from a shared ancestor.

Scientists in the study combined observations of primate behaviour with data on evolutionary relationships, to rewind the clock and try and date the first kiss.

"Using these two key pieces of information, we employed modeling approach that allowed us to simulate different evolutionary scenarios," said lead author Dr Matilda Brindle of Oxford's Department of Biology.

Running the model millions of times put that first kiss at 21.5-16.9 million years ago.

The findings were published in the journal: Evolution and Human Behavior.

The scientists' unromantic definition of kissing was "non-aggressive, mouth-to-mouth contact that did not involve food transfer".

This included sexual kissing as well as platonic kisses such as those between family members or in friendly greetings.

How kissing emerged remains a subject of debate, as does why it persisted.

"Some people suggest sexual kissing is a useful way of assessing mate quality or suitability," Dr Brindle said.

"Alternatively, kissing could be a type of foreplay, increasing sexual arousal and boosting the chance of fertilisation," she added.

Platonic pecks are thought to be used to navigate complex social relationships or increase bonding, she said.

The study argued Neanderthals and humans also likely locked lips, given evidence that they interbred and shared an oral microbe - a sign they swapped saliva - long after the two species diverged 450,000-750,000 years ago.