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圈养恒河猴(猕猴)中的社会性拔毛行为。

Social hair pulling in captive rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta).

作者信息

Heagerty Allison, Wales Rebecca A, Prongay Kamm, Gottlieb Daniel H, Coleman Kristine

机构信息

Oregon National Primate Research Center, Oregon Health and Sciences University, Beaverton, Oregon.

出版信息

Am J Primatol. 2017 Dec;79(12). doi: 10.1002/ajp.22720. Epub 2017 Nov 2.

Abstract

Alopecia is common among captive populations of nonhuman primates. There are many potential causes of alopecia, including physiological conditions such as hormonal imbalance and infection, features of the captive environment such as housing type, ground substrate, and group density, as well as behavioral abnormalities such as self-plucking. A potential behavioral cause of alopecia in group-housed primates is social hair pulling, where one animal pulls hair from a conspecific. While social hair pulling has been conflated with overgrooming in some of the alopecia literature, other authors have categorized it as a form of aggression rather than a form of excessive grooming. In this study, we examined social hair pulling, grooming, and aggression within seven groups of rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) (N = 319). We took weekly 30-min behavioral observations on each group for one year to assess the patterns of hair pulling and grooming, which monkeys were receiving and initiating these behaviors, as well as aggression and other behaviors indicating dominance. We also assessed the amount of alopecia on each individual monthly. While grooming tended to be directed "up" the hierarchy (i.e., monkeys were more likely to groom animals of a higher rank than lower rank), most hair pulling was directed "down" the hierarchy. Further, hair pulling seldom co-occurred with aggressive behaviors, suggesting that it was not a form of aggression. Hair pulling also usually resulted in ingestion of the pulled hair. Hair pulling was correlated with alopecia; monkeys who were frequent recipients of hair pulling scored higher on monthly alopecia ratings than those who were less often observed having hair pulled. Our results suggest that social hair pulling is a behavior distinct from either grooming or aggressive behavior, and that it may contribute to alopecia in socially housed macaques.

摘要

脱发在圈养的非人灵长类动物群体中很常见。脱发有许多潜在原因,包括荷尔蒙失衡和感染等生理状况、圈养环境特征如住房类型、地面基质和群体密度,以及自我拔毛等行为异常。群居灵长类动物脱发的一个潜在行为原因是社会拔毛,即一只动物从同种动物身上拔毛。虽然在一些脱发文献中,社会拔毛与过度梳理毛发被混为一谈,但其他作者将其归类为一种攻击形式,而非过度梳理毛发的形式。在本研究中,我们观察了七组恒河猴(猕猴)(N = 319)的社会拔毛、梳理毛发和攻击行为。我们对每组进行了为期一年的每周一次、每次30分钟的行为观察,以评估拔毛和梳理毛发的模式、哪些猴子接受和发起了这些行为,以及攻击行为和其他显示支配地位的行为。我们还每月评估每只个体的脱发量。虽然梳理毛发倾向于朝着等级制度的“上方”进行(即猴子更有可能梳理等级较高而非较低的动物),但大多数拔毛行为是朝着等级制度的“下方”进行的。此外,拔毛很少与攻击行为同时发生,这表明它不是一种攻击形式。拔毛通常还会导致被拔下的毛发被吞食。拔毛与脱发相关;经常被拔毛的猴子在每月脱发评分上比很少被观察到被拔毛的猴子得分更高。我们的结果表明,社会拔毛是一种与梳理毛发或攻击行为不同的行为,并且它可能导致群居猕猴出现脱发。

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