Smit Nikolaos, Robbins Martha M
Department of Biology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Elife. 2025 Aug 22;14:RP107093. doi: 10.7554/eLife.107093.
Competition is commonly reflected in aggressive interactions among groupmates as individuals try to attain or maintain higher social ranks that can offer them better access to critical resources. In this study, we investigate the factors that can shift competitive incentives against higher- or lower-ranking groupmates, that is, more or less powerful individuals. We use a long-term behavioural data set on five wild groups of the two gorilla species starting in 1998, and we show that most aggression is directed from higher- to lower-ranking adult females close in rank, highlighting rank-reinforcement incentives. Yet, females directed 42% of aggression to higher-ranking females than themselves. Females targeted groupmates of higher rank with increasing number of males in the group, suggesting that males might buffer female-female aggression risk. Contrarily, they targeted females of lower rank with increasing number of females in the group, potentially because this is a low-risk option that females prefer when they have access to a larger pool of competitors to choose from. Lactating and pregnant females, especially those in the latest stage of pregnancy, targeted groupmates of higher rank than the groupmates that cycling females targeted, suggesting that energetic needs may motivate females to risk confrontation with more powerful rivals. Our study provides critical insights into the evolution of competitive behaviour, showing that aggression heuristics, the simple rules that animals use to guide their aggressive interactions, are not merely species-specific but also dependent on the conditions that populations and individuals experience.
竞争通常体现在群体成员之间的攻击性互动中,因为个体试图获得或维持更高的社会等级,而更高的社会等级能让它们更好地获取关键资源。在本研究中,我们调查了可能改变针对较高或较低等级群体成员(即权力较大或较小的个体)的竞争动机的因素。我们使用了从1998年开始的关于两种大猩猩五个野生群体的长期行为数据集,并且我们发现,大多数攻击行为是由等级相近的成年雌性中等级较高者指向等级较低者,这突出了等级强化动机。然而,雌性将42%的攻击行为指向了比自己等级更高的雌性。随着群体中雄性数量的增加,雌性将攻击目标指向等级更高的群体成员,这表明雄性可能会缓冲雌性之间的攻击风险。相反,随着群体中雌性数量的增加,她们将攻击目标指向等级较低的雌性,这可能是因为当她们有更多的竞争对手可供选择时,这是一个低风险的选择,是雌性所偏好的。哺乳期和怀孕的雌性,尤其是处于怀孕后期的雌性,将攻击目标指向比处于发情期的雌性所指向的群体成员等级更高的群体成员,这表明能量需求可能促使雌性冒险与更强大的对手对抗。我们的研究为竞争行为进化提供了关键见解,表明攻击启发式,即动物用于指导其攻击性互动的简单规则,不仅是物种特有的,而且还取决于群体和个体所经历的条件。