Young, C., Majolo, B., Schulke, O. and Ostner, J. (2014) Male social bonds and rank predict supporter selection in cooperative aggression in wild Barbary macaques. Animal Behaviour, 95 . pp. 23-32. ISSN 0003-3472
Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.06.007
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14738 Young et al Anim Behav 2014 (003).pdf - Whole Document Restricted to Repository staff only 335kB | |
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14738 Male social bonds and rank predict supporter selection in cooperative aggression in wild Barbary macaques.pdf - Whole Document 349kB |
Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
Cooperation in coalitions against coresident males has been shown to increase male reproductive success directly via increased mating success (levelling coalitions) or indirectly via increased dominance success (rank-changing coalitions). Two mechanisms guiding coalitionary supporter selection have been proposed. First, supporter selection may depend on the supporters available, whereby an animal chooses the highest ranking supporter present to maximize their chance of winning. Second, males may also select supporters based on the strength of the social bond they share with them. Different studies on male Barbary macaques, Macaca sylvanus, have produced support for both mechanisms but crucial assumptions and predictions remained untested. The aim of this study was to test predictions derived for both mechanisms after establishing whether Barbary macaque males formed social bonds. We observed two wild groups of macaques in Morocco (>2000. h focal animal data) and recorded the identity of males recruited to join a coalition, of all bystanders, and of the coalitionary target. We demonstrate for the first time that male Barbary macaques formed strong, equitable social bonds that were stable for 2 years. Corroborating earlier studies we found that males selected supporters by more than one criterion, namely by the strength of their social bonds to the potential ally and by their dominance rank position among potential supporters. The animals who received recruitment signals were more likely to reject the recruitment invitation the weaker their social bond to the recruiter was and if the target was higher ranking than the recruiter. In a subset in which we examined only levelling coalitions that would flatten the mating skew, males only used the mechanism that would maximize the feasibility of the coalition by more frequently selecting the highest ranked bystander. These results suggest that males flexibly apply different criteria for supporter selection depending on the context of the conflict. © 2014 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
Keywords: | aggression, cooperative behavior, male behavior, prediction, primate, recruitment (population dynamics), social behavior, wild population, Morocco, NotOAChecked |
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Subjects: | D Veterinary Sciences, Agriculture and related subjects > D300 Animal Science |
Divisions: | College of Science > School of Life Sciences |
Related URLs: | |
ID Code: | 14738 |
Deposited On: | 20 Aug 2014 13:36 |
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