Bret Céline, Sueur Cédric, Ngoubangoye Barthélémy, Verrier Delphine, Deneubourg Jean-Louis, Petit Odile
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Département Ecologie, Physiologie et Ethologie, Strasbourg, France ; Université de Strasbourg, Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien, Strasbourg, France ; Unit of Social Ecology, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium.
PLoS One. 2013 Dec 10;8(12):e83015. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083015. eCollection 2013.
The difficulty involved in following mandrills in the wild means that very little is known about social structure in this species. Most studies initially considered mandrill groups to be an aggregation of one-male/multifemale units, with males occupying central positions in a structure similar to those observed in the majority of baboon species. However, a recent study hypothesized that mandrills form stable groups with only two or three permanent males, and that females occupy more central positions than males within these groups. We used social network analysis methods to examine how a semi-free ranging group of 19 mandrills is structured. We recorded all dyads of individuals that were in contact as a measure of association. The betweenness and the eigenvector centrality for each individual were calculated and correlated to kinship, age and dominance. Finally, we performed a resilience analysis by simulating the removal of individuals displaying the highest betweenness and eigenvector centrality values. We found that related dyads were more frequently associated than unrelated dyads. Moreover, our results showed that the cumulative distribution of individual betweenness and eigenvector centrality followed a power function, which is characteristic of scale-free networks. This property showed that some group members, mostly females, occupied a highly central position. Finally, the resilience analysis showed that the removal of the two most central females split the network into small subgroups and increased the network diameter. Critically, this study confirms that females appear to occupy more central positions than males in mandrill groups. Consequently, these females appear to be crucial for group cohesion and probably play a pivotal role in this species.
在野外追踪山魈的困难意味着我们对该物种的社会结构知之甚少。大多数研究最初认为山魈群体是由一雄多雌单元组成的聚合体,雄性在类似于大多数狒狒物种中观察到的结构中占据中心位置。然而,最近的一项研究推测,山魈形成了只有两三个永久雄性的稳定群体,并且在这些群体中雌性比雄性占据更中心的位置。我们使用社会网络分析方法来研究一个由19只半散养山魈组成的群体的结构。我们记录了所有有接触的个体二元组作为关联度的衡量标准。计算了每个个体的中介中心性和特征向量中心性,并将其与亲缘关系、年龄和优势地位相关联。最后,我们通过模拟移除中介中心性和特征向量中心性值最高的个体进行了弹性分析。我们发现有亲缘关系的二元组比无亲缘关系的二元组关联更频繁。此外,我们的结果表明个体中介中心性和特征向量中心性的累积分布遵循幂函数,这是无标度网络的特征。这一特性表明一些群体成员,主要是雌性,占据了高度中心的位置。最后,弹性分析表明移除两个最中心的雌性会将网络分裂成小的子群体并增加网络直径。至关重要的是,这项研究证实了在山魈群体中雌性似乎比雄性占据更中心的位置。因此,这些雌性对于群体凝聚力似乎至关重要,并且可能在该物种中发挥关键作用。