The dynamics of dominance in a ‘despotic’ society

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Rosemary Blersch , Brianne A. Beisner , Jessica J. Vandeleest , Brenda McCowan
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Abstract

Dominance hierarchies are a key feature in the dynamics of animal social groups, playing a crucial role in fostering group stability. Despite often being viewed as static, persistent linear structures, hierarchies are fundamentally dynamic and can change over time due to ecological conditions, demographic changes and ontogenetic development. There are numerous methods used to construct hierarchies and quantify individual dominance rank, but methods to capture the dynamics of a hierarchy across time have only recently been developed. As such, relatively little is known about the longitudinal hierarchy dynamics in many social species, including nonhuman primates, and the timescale at which these hierarchy dynamics play out. Here we consider the longitudinal hierarchy dynamics across a 4-year period in a large group of rhesus macaques, Macaca mulatta. We investigated group and individual level predictors of active rank dynamics, or dynamics that arise from rank reversals. We found that, despite rhesus macaques being considered to have relatively stable hierarchies, there was significant active rank mobility in both males and females, even in the face of limited resource competition. Female rank change was not solely driven by matrilineal structure or demographic processes as females also opportunistically ascended in rank. Furthermore, we found strong links between rank certainty and hierarchy dynamics with periods of high hierarchy instability associated with low mean dominance certainty. Lastly, we found limited evidence of associations between periods of high active rank dynamics and social global network structure. This suggests more localized dynamics during hierarchy instability are at play rather than widescale network reorganization. Together, these results stress the importance of considering social context in rank dynamics, illustrate the dynamic nature of macaque dominance rank and further highlight the opportunistic nature of the species.
专制 "社会中的统治动态
统治等级是动物社会群体动态的一个关键特征,在促进群体稳定方面发挥着至关重要的作用。尽管等级制度通常被视为静态的、持续的线性结构,但从根本上说,等级制度是动态的,会随着时间的推移因生态条件、人口变化和本体发育而发生变化。用于构建等级结构和量化个体优势等级的方法有很多,但捕捉等级结构跨时间动态变化的方法直到最近才被开发出来。因此,人们对包括非人灵长类在内的许多社会物种的纵向等级动态以及这些等级动态的时间尺度知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了一个大型猕猴群体在 4 年时间里的纵向等级动态。我们研究了群体和个体水平上的主动等级动态或由等级逆转产生的动态的预测因素。我们发现,尽管猕猴被认为具有相对稳定的等级制度,但即使面对有限的资源竞争,雄性和雌性猕猴的等级都有显著的主动流动性。雌性等级变化并不完全受母系结构或人口统计过程的驱动,因为雌性也会伺机提升等级。此外,我们还发现等级确定性与等级动态之间存在密切联系,等级高度不稳定时期与平均优势确定性低有关。最后,我们发现等级动态活跃期与全球社会网络结构之间的关联证据有限。这表明,在等级制度不稳定时期,更多的是局部动态因素在起作用,而不是大规模的网络重组。总之,这些结果强调了在等级动态中考虑社会背景的重要性,说明了猕猴优势等级的动态性质,并进一步突出了该物种的机会主义性质。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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