Snyder-Mackler Noah, Kohn Jordan N, Barreiro Luis B, Johnson Zachary P, Wilson Mark E, Tung Jenny
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC, U.S.A.
Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, U.S.A.
Anim Behav. 2016 Jan 1;111:307-317. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2015.10.033.
Strong social relationships confer health and fitness benefits in a number of species, motivating the need to understand the processes through which they arise. In female cercopithecine primates, both kinship and dominance rank are thought to influence rates of affiliative behaviour and social partner preference. Teasing apart the relative importance of these factors has been challenging, however, as female kin often occupy similar positions in the dominance hierarchy. Here, we isolated the specific effects of rank on social relationships in female rhesus macaques by analysing grooming patterns in 18 social groups that did not contain close relatives, and in which dominance ranks were experimentally randomized. We found that grooming was asymmetrically directed towards higher-ranking females and that grooming bouts temporarily decreased the likelihood of aggression between grooming partners, supporting the idea that grooming is associated with social tolerance. Even in the absence of kin, females formed the strongest grooming relationships with females adjacent to them in rank, a pattern that was strongest for the highest-ranking females. Using simulations, we show that three rules for allocating grooming based on dominance rank recapitulated most of the relationships we observed. Finally, we evaluated whether a female's tendency to engage in grooming behaviour was stable across time and social setting. We found that one measure, the rate of grooming females provided to others (but not the rate of grooming females received), exhibited modest stability after accounting for the primary effect of dominance rank. Together, our findings indicate that dominance rank has strong effects on social relationships in the absence of kin, suggesting the importance of considering social status and social connectedness jointly when investigating their health and fitness consequences.
紧密的社会关系在许多物种中都能带来健康和体能方面的益处,这促使人们有必要去了解这些关系产生的过程。在雌性猕猴灵长类动物中,亲属关系和等级地位都被认为会影响亲和行为的发生率和社会伙伴偏好。然而,区分这些因素的相对重要性一直具有挑战性,因为雌性亲属在等级制度中往往占据相似的位置。在这里,我们通过分析18个不包含近亲且等级地位经过实验随机化的社会群体中的梳理毛发模式,分离出了等级地位对雌性恒河猴社会关系的具体影响。我们发现,梳理毛发行为不对称地指向等级较高的雌性,并且梳理毛发的回合会暂时降低梳理毛发伙伴之间发生攻击行为的可能性,这支持了梳理毛发与社会容忍度相关的观点。即使在没有亲属的情况下,雌性也与等级上与其相邻的雌性建立了最紧密的梳理毛发关系,这种模式在等级最高的雌性中最为明显。通过模拟,我们表明基于等级地位分配梳理毛发的三条规则概括了我们观察到的大部分关系。最后,我们评估了雌性参与梳理毛发行为的倾向在时间和社会环境中是否稳定。我们发现,在考虑了等级地位的主要影响后,一个指标,即雌性向其他个体提供梳理毛发的速率(而非接受梳理毛发的速率)表现出适度的稳定性。总之,我们的研究结果表明,在没有亲属的情况下,等级地位对社会关系有很强的影响,这表明在研究它们对健康和体能的影响时,共同考虑社会地位和社会联系的重要性。