Levé Marine, Sueur Cédric, Petit Odile, Matsuzawa Tetsuro, Hirata Satoshi
Ecole normale supérieure, Paris, France.
Département Ecologie, Physiologie et Ethologie, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Strasbourg, France.
Primates. 2016 Jan;57(1):73-82. doi: 10.1007/s10329-015-0494-y. Epub 2015 Sep 24.
Many chimpanzees throughout the world are housed in captivity, and there is an increasing effort to recreate social groups by mixing individuals with captive origins with those with wild origins. Captive origins may entail restricted rearing conditions during early infant life, including, for example, no maternal rearing and a limited social life. Early rearing conditions have been linked with differences in tool-use behavior between captive- and wild-born chimpanzees. If physical cognition can be impaired by non-natural rearing, what might be the consequences for social capacities? This study describes the results of network analysis based on grooming interactions in chimpanzees with wild and captive origins living in the Kumamoto Sanctuary in Kumamoto, Japan. Grooming is a complex social activity occupying up to 25% of chimpanzees' waking hours and plays a role in the emergence and maintenance of social relationships. We assessed whether the social centralities and roles of chimpanzees might be affected by their origin (captive vs wild). We found that captive- and wild-origin chimpanzees did not differ in their grooming behavior, but that theoretical removal of individuals from the network had differing impacts depending on the origin of the individual. Contrary to findings that non-natural early rearing has long-term effects on physical cognition, living in social groups seems to compensate for the negative effects of non-natural early rearing. Social network analysis (SNA) and, in particular, theoretical removal analysis, were able to highlight differences between individuals that would have been impossible to show using classical methods. The social environment of captive animals is important to their well-being, and we are only beginning to understand how SNA might help to enhance animal welfare.
世界各地有许多黑猩猩被圈养,人们越来越努力地将圈养出生的个体与野生出生的个体混合,以重建社会群体。圈养出生可能意味着在婴儿早期生活中饲养条件受限,例如,没有母性抚养且社交生活有限。早期饲养条件与圈养出生和野生出生的黑猩猩在工具使用行为上的差异有关。如果非自然饲养会损害身体认知,那么对社交能力会有什么影响呢?本研究描述了基于日本熊本县熊本保护区内野生和圈养出生的黑猩猩梳理互动的网络分析结果。梳理是一种复杂的社交活动,占黑猩猩醒着时间的25%,并在社会关系的形成和维持中发挥作用。我们评估了黑猩猩的社会中心性和角色是否可能受到其出身(圈养与野生)的影响。我们发现,圈养出身和野生出身的黑猩猩在梳理行为上没有差异,但从网络中理论上移除个体的影响因个体出身而异。与非自然早期饲养对身体认知有长期影响的研究结果相反,生活在社会群体中似乎可以弥补非自然早期饲养的负面影响。社会网络分析(SNA),特别是理论移除分析,能够突出使用传统方法无法显示的个体之间的差异。圈养动物的社会环境对它们的福祉很重要,而我们才刚刚开始了解社会网络分析如何有助于提高动物福利。