Buhl Jacqueline S, Aure Bonn, Ruiz-Lambides Angelina, Gonzalez-Martinez Janis, Platt Michael L, Brent Lauren J N
Caribbean Primate Research Center, University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus, Punta Santiago, Puerto Rico 00741.
Int J Primatol. 2012 Aug;33(4):860-871. doi: 10.1007/s10764-012-9624-1. Epub 2012 Jul 7.
Among animals that form social bonds, the death of a conspecific may be a significant social event, representing the loss of an ally and resulting in disruptions to the dominance hierarchy. Despite this potential biological importance, we have only limited knowledge of animals' reactions to the death of a group member. This is particularly true of responses to dead adults, as most reports describe the responses of mothers to dead infants. Here, we describe in detail and provide video evidence of the behavioral responses of a group of free-ranging rhesus macaques () immediately after the death of a mid-ranking adult male as a result of a fatal attack. High-ranking male members of the group, suspected to have carried out the attack, dragged and bit the dead body, exhibiting a rate of aggression 20 times greater than baseline levels. Lower-ranking individuals approached and inspected the body by looking closely, smelling, and grooming the fur. There was inconclusive evidence that these rhesus macaques found the death of a conspecific stressful: Levels of grooming between group members after the fatal attack were significantly higher than baseline levels, and higher than levels of grooming after nonfatal attacks. However, when grooming levels were adjusted based on the assumption that individuals positioned close to the body, i.e., those visible to researchers, were more likely to be engaged in grooming than those positioned farther away, this difference from baseline was no longer significant. The rate of self-directed behaviors after the fatal attack was also not different from baseline. Many of the behaviors we observed directed toward the body (aggression, inspection) have been previously reported in chimpanzees and geladas, and are similar to reactions sometimes displayed by humans. As such, this report represents a potentially valuable contribution the nascent field of nonhuman primate thanatology.
在形成社会纽带的动物中,同种动物的死亡可能是一个重大的社会事件,代表着失去一个盟友,并导致社会等级制度的混乱。尽管这具有潜在的生物学重要性,但我们对动物对群体成员死亡的反应了解有限。对于对成年死亡个体的反应尤其如此,因为大多数报告描述的是母亲对死亡幼崽的反应。在这里,我们详细描述并提供视频证据,展示了一群自由放养的恒河猴在一只中年成年雄性因致命攻击死亡后立即出现的行为反应。该群体中涉嫌实施攻击的高等级雄性成员拖拽并撕咬尸体,表现出的攻击率比基线水平高20倍。低等级个体靠近并通过仔细查看、嗅闻和梳理毛发来检查尸体。有不确定的证据表明这些恒河猴发现同种动物的死亡会造成压力:致命攻击后群体成员之间的梳理水平显著高于基线水平,且高于非致命攻击后的梳理水平。然而,当根据靠近尸体的个体(即研究人员可见的个体)比远离尸体的个体更有可能参与梳理的假设来调整梳理水平时,与基线的这种差异就不再显著。致命攻击后的自我导向行为发生率也与基线没有差异。我们观察到的许多针对尸体的行为(攻击、检查)此前在黑猩猩和狮尾狒中也有报道,并且与人类有时表现出的反应相似。因此,本报告对新兴的非人灵长类动物死亡学领域可能做出了有价值的贡献。