Almeling Laura, Sennhenn-Reulen Holger, Hammerschmidt Kurt, Freund Alexandra M, Fischer Julia
University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, German Primate Center-Leibniz Institute for Primate Research, Göttingen, Germany.
Am J Primatol. 2017 Nov;79(11). doi: 10.1002/ajp.22711. Epub 2017 Oct 6.
Human aging is accompanied by a decrease in social activity and a narrowing in social networks. Studies in nonhuman primates may provide valuable comparative insights in which way aging impacts social life, in the absence of cultural conventions and an awareness of a limited lifetime. For female Barbary macaques at "La Forêt des Singes" in Rocamadour, France, we previously reported an age-associated decrease in active grooming time and network size. Here, we aimed to extend these findings by investigating in which way physical decline, spatial proximity, and aggression vary with age in female Barbary macaques. We analyzed >1,200 hr of focal observations for 46 females aged 5-29 years. As expected, older females engaged less frequently in challenging locomotor activity, such as climbing or running, than younger ones. The previously reported decrease in grooming time was not due to shorter grooming bout duration. Instead, active grooming bouts lasted even longer, which discounts the idea that manual fatigue explains the shift in grooming pattern. We found that older females tended to be spatially reclusive and that they were less frequently the targets of aggression. Although older females showed aggressive behaviors at similar rates as younger females, the proportion of low-level aggression (i.e., threats) increased with age. We suggest that these threats are not simply a signal of dominance, but also function to deter approaches by others. Overall, these findings are in line with the idea that older females aim to avoid potentially negative interactions, specifically if these are costly. In sum, these findings support the idea that shifts in female Barbary macaques' grooming activity, do not simply result from physical deterioration, but are instead due to a higher selectivity in the choice of social partners.
人类衰老伴随着社交活动的减少和社交网络的缩小。在没有文化习俗和有限寿命意识的情况下,对非人类灵长类动物的研究可能会提供有关衰老如何影响社会生活的宝贵比较见解。对于法国罗卡马杜尔“猴林”的雌性巴巴里猕猴,我们之前报道过主动梳理毛发时间和社交网络大小与年龄相关的减少。在这里,我们旨在通过研究雌性巴巴里猕猴的身体衰退、空间接近度和攻击性如何随年龄变化来扩展这些发现。我们分析了46只年龄在5至29岁之间的雌性猕猴超过1200小时的焦点观察数据。正如预期的那样,年长的雌性比年轻的雌性更少参与具有挑战性的运动活动,如攀爬或奔跑。之前报道的梳理毛发时间减少并非由于每次梳理毛发的持续时间缩短。相反,主动梳理毛发的回合持续时间甚至更长,这削弱了手部疲劳解释梳理模式转变的观点。我们发现年长的雌性倾向于在空间上独处,并且它们较少成为攻击的目标。尽管年长的雌性表现出攻击行为的频率与年轻雌性相似,但低级别攻击(即威胁)的比例随年龄增加。我们认为这些威胁不仅仅是支配地位的信号,还起到威慑他人靠近的作用。总体而言,这些发现与年长雌性旨在避免潜在负面互动的观点一致,特别是如果这些互动代价高昂。总之,这些发现支持了这样一种观点,即雌性巴巴里猕猴梳理毛发活动的转变并非仅仅源于身体衰退,而是由于在选择社交伙伴时具有更高的选择性。