Mielke Alexander, Crockford Catherine, Wittig Roman M
Department of Psychology, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, U.K.
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Department of Primatology, Leipzig, Germany.
Anim Behav. 2019 Dec;158:201-209. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2019.10.001.
Transmitting information about the location of a predator in social animal species can be seen as an investment in a public good, where information is the resource and group members benefit from reduced fatalities of kin and cooperation partners in their community. As few empirical tests of this idea exist in natural settings, we conducted a field experiment using snake models in wild sooty mangabeys, . We tested sooty mangabey alarm-calling patterns when exposed to viper models, investigating whether individuals called to signal fitness, to warn specific group members, or when information about the threat is not public, as would be predicted by public goods games. Strong interindividual differences in the likelihood of alarm calling existed. We found that overlap between callers was rare. Individuals were more likely to call if fewer individuals were present at the encounter site and if they had not heard other alarm calls before arriving at the site, indicating that alarm calls extended the information about the threat to following group members. This group size effect is in line with predictions of the volunteer's dilemma, a public goods game. We found no indications that individuals called specifically to warn ignorant individuals, kin or cooperation partners. Calling when information about the threat was not public allowed individuals to warn following group members while avoiding redundancy. Public goods games have not been employed widely in studies of the evolution of primate cooperation and animal communication in general but may provide useful models for understanding group level cooperation.
在群居动物物种中传递有关捕食者位置的信息可被视为对公共利益的一种投入,其中信息是资源,群体成员因亲属和社群中合作伙伴的死亡率降低而受益。由于在自然环境中对这一观点的实证检验很少,我们在野生黑冠猕猴中使用蛇模型进行了一项野外实验。我们测试了黑冠猕猴在接触蝰蛇模型时的警报呼叫模式,调查个体发出警报是为了表明自身健康状况、警告特定群体成员,还是在威胁信息并非公共信息时发出警报,这正如公共物品博弈所预测的那样。警报呼叫的可能性存在很强的个体差异。我们发现呼叫者之间的重叠很少见。如果相遇地点的个体较少,且个体在到达该地点之前没有听到其他警报声,那么它们更有可能发出警报,这表明警报声将有关威胁的信息传递给了随后的群体成员。这种群体规模效应与公共物品博弈——志愿者困境的预测相符。我们没有发现个体专门呼叫以警告无知个体、亲属或合作伙伴的迹象。在威胁信息并非公共信息时发出警报,能让个体在避免冗余的同时警告随后的群体成员。公共物品博弈在灵长类动物合作进化及一般动物交流的研究中尚未得到广泛应用,但可能为理解群体层面的合作提供有用的模型。