Instituto de Neuroetologia, Universidad Veracruzana, Xalapa, Mexico.
Innovació i Formació, Fundació Universitat de Girona, Girona, Spain.
Am J Primatol. 2020 Jan;82(1):e23078. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23078. Epub 2019 Dec 15.
Access to food is of major importance to the fitness and survival of every individual, particularly in group-living animals, in which individual characteristics and food distribution can affect food intake. Additionally, several species of primates are known to share food under certain conditions. Such unresisted transfer of food from one individual to another appears to be adaptive, for instance as a tool to maintain and reinforce social bonds. In this study, we aimed to test how food retrieval and food sharing varies depending on the social relationship between individuals, and on the characteristics of the food. In six different test conditions, we provided a captive group of Guinea baboons (Papio papio, N = 23) with multiple food items, differing in quality, quantity, density, monopolizability, and effort required to obtain it. We further used behavioral observations to assess individual relationships and possible variations in grooming exchanges linked to food sharing events. Out of 424 events in which food items were retrieved by the subjects, we detected no instances of active food sharing and only 17 of passive food sharing. The way food was retrieved was affected by individual and food characteristics (i.e., quantity, quality, and monopolizability of food): Males and central individuals (i.e., those connected to many partners, and/or having partners with many connections in the social network) were more likely to retrieve food during test conditions. In particular, events of passive food sharing mostly happened when the quality of food was low, and between individuals belonging to the same community (i.e., having close relationships). No other food characteristics affected the probability to share food, and the occurrence of food sharing had no immediate effect on grooming exchanges. Overall, our findings suggest that food sharing is relatively rare in Guinea baboons unless the food has a low quality and individuals form close social bonds.
食物的获取对每个个体的健康和生存至关重要,尤其是在群体生活的动物中,个体特征和食物分布会影响食物的摄取。此外,已知有几种灵长类动物在某些条件下会共享食物。这种食物从一个个体转移到另一个个体的行为似乎是适应性的,例如,作为维持和加强社会关系的一种工具。在这项研究中,我们旨在测试食物的获取和分享如何因个体之间的社会关系以及食物的特征而有所不同。在六种不同的测试条件下,我们向一组圈养的几内亚狒狒(Papio papio,N=23)提供了多种食物,这些食物在质量、数量、密度、可垄断性和获取所需的努力方面存在差异。我们进一步使用行为观察来评估个体关系以及与食物分享事件相关的梳理交换的可能变化。在 424 个被研究对象获取食物的事件中,我们没有发现主动分享食物的情况,只有 17 个是被动分享食物的情况。食物的获取方式受到个体和食物特征的影响(即食物的数量、质量和可垄断性):雄性和核心个体(即与许多伙伴有关联的个体,或在社会网络中具有许多伙伴关系的个体)在测试条件下更有可能获取食物。特别是,当食物质量较低,且食物来自同一社区的个体(即具有密切关系的个体)时,被动分享食物的情况居多。没有其他食物特征影响分享食物的概率,而食物分享的发生对梳理交换没有直接影响。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,在几内亚狒狒中,食物分享相对较少,除非食物质量较低,且个体之间形成密切的社会关系。